Latitudinal trends in stable isotope signatures and carbon-concentrating mechanisms of northeast Atlantic rhodoliths

Rhodoliths are free-living calcifying red algae that form extensive beds in shallow marine benthic environments (<250 m), which provide important habitats and nurseries for marine organisms and contribute to carbonate sediment accumulation. There is growing concern that these organisms are sensit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Hofmann, L., Heesch, S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0003-B88A-2
http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0003-B88C-0
Description
Summary:Rhodoliths are free-living calcifying red algae that form extensive beds in shallow marine benthic environments (<250 m), which provide important habitats and nurseries for marine organisms and contribute to carbonate sediment accumulation. There is growing concern that these organisms are sensitive to global climate change, yet little is known about their physiology. Considering their broad distribution along most continental coastlines, their potential sensitivity to global change could have important consequences for the productivity and diversity of benthic coastal environments. The goal of this study was to determine the plasticity of carbon-concentrating mechanisms (CCMs) of rhodoliths along a latitudinal gradient in the northeast Atlantic using natural stable isotope signatures. The delta C-13 signature of macroalgae can be used to provide an indication of the preferred inorganic carbon source (CO2 vs. HCO3-). Here we present the total (delta C-13(T)) and organic (delta C-13(org))delta C-13 signatures of northeast Atlantic rhodoliths with respect to changing environmental conditions along a latitudinal gradient from the Canary Islands to Spitsbergen. The delta C-13(T) signatures (-11.9 to -0.89) of rhodoliths analyzed in this study were generally higher than the delta C-13(org) signatures, which ranged from -25.7 to -2.8. We observed a decreasing trend in delta C-13(T) signatures with increasing latitude and temperature, while delta C-13(org) signatures were only significantly correlated to dissolved inorganic carbon. These data suggest that high-latitude rhodoliths rely more on CO2 as an inorganic carbon source, while low-latitude rhodoliths likely take up HCO3- directly, but none of our specimens had partial derivative C-13(org) signatures less than -30, suggesting that none of them relied solely on diffusive CO2 uptake. However, depth also has a significant effect on both skeletal and organic delta C-13 signatures, suggesting that both local and latitudinal trends influence the plasticity of ...