Statistical results from Resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural pH variability

Ocean acidification is a threat to the continued accretion of coral reefs, though some undergo daily fluctuations in pH exceeding declines predicted by 2100. We test whether exposure to greater pH variability enhances resistance to ocean acidification for the coral Goniopora sp. and coralline alga H...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: C. E. Cornwall, S. Comeau, T. M. DeCarlo, B. Moore, Q. D'Alexis, M. T. McCulloch
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.6936266.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Statistical_results_from_Resistance_of_corals_and_coralline_algae_to_ocean_acidification_physiological_control_of_calcification_under_natural_pH_variability/6936266
id ftroysocietyfig:oai:figshare.com:article/6936266
record_format openpolar
spelling ftroysocietyfig:oai:figshare.com:article/6936266 2023-05-15T17:49:05+02:00 Statistical results from Resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural pH variability C. E. Cornwall S. Comeau T. M. DeCarlo B. Moore Q. D'Alexis M. T. McCulloch 2018-08-06T15:15:54Z https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.6936266.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Statistical_results_from_Resistance_of_corals_and_coralline_algae_to_ocean_acidification_physiological_control_of_calcification_under_natural_pH_variability/6936266 unknown doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.6936266.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Statistical_results_from_Resistance_of_corals_and_coralline_algae_to_ocean_acidification_physiological_control_of_calcification_under_natural_pH_variability/6936266 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Physiology Ecology environmental variability biomineralization ocean acidification resistance to climate change corals coralline algae Text Journal contribution 2018 ftroysocietyfig https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.6936266.v1 2022-01-01T19:46:06Z Ocean acidification is a threat to the continued accretion of coral reefs, though some undergo daily fluctuations in pH exceeding declines predicted by 2100. We test whether exposure to greater pH variability enhances resistance to ocean acidification for the coral Goniopora sp. and coralline alga Hydrolithon reinboldii from two sites: one with low pH variability (less than 0.15 units daily; Shell Island) and a site with high pH variability (up to 1.4 pH units daily; Tallon Island). We grew populations of both species for more than 100 days under a combination of differing pH variability (high/low) and means (ambient pH 8.05/ocean acidification pH 7.65). Calcification rates of Goniopora sp. were unaffected by the examined variables. Calcification rates of H. reinboldii were significantly faster in Tallon than in Shell Island individuals, and Tallon Island individuals calcified faster in the high variability pH 8.05 treatment compared with all others. Geochemical proxies for carbonate chemistry within the calcifying fluid (cf) of both species indicated that only mean seawater pH influenced pH cf . pH treatments had no effect on proxies for Ω cf . These limited responses to extreme pH treatments demonstrate that some calcifying taxa may be capable of maintaining constant rates of calcification under ocean acidification by actively modifying Ω cf . Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification The Royal Society: Figshare Shell Island ENVELOPE(-94.367,-94.367,64.034,64.034)
institution Open Polar
collection The Royal Society: Figshare
op_collection_id ftroysocietyfig
language unknown
topic Physiology
Ecology
environmental variability
biomineralization
ocean acidification
resistance to climate change
corals
coralline algae
spellingShingle Physiology
Ecology
environmental variability
biomineralization
ocean acidification
resistance to climate change
corals
coralline algae
C. E. Cornwall
S. Comeau
T. M. DeCarlo
B. Moore
Q. D'Alexis
M. T. McCulloch
Statistical results from Resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural pH variability
topic_facet Physiology
Ecology
environmental variability
biomineralization
ocean acidification
resistance to climate change
corals
coralline algae
description Ocean acidification is a threat to the continued accretion of coral reefs, though some undergo daily fluctuations in pH exceeding declines predicted by 2100. We test whether exposure to greater pH variability enhances resistance to ocean acidification for the coral Goniopora sp. and coralline alga Hydrolithon reinboldii from two sites: one with low pH variability (less than 0.15 units daily; Shell Island) and a site with high pH variability (up to 1.4 pH units daily; Tallon Island). We grew populations of both species for more than 100 days under a combination of differing pH variability (high/low) and means (ambient pH 8.05/ocean acidification pH 7.65). Calcification rates of Goniopora sp. were unaffected by the examined variables. Calcification rates of H. reinboldii were significantly faster in Tallon than in Shell Island individuals, and Tallon Island individuals calcified faster in the high variability pH 8.05 treatment compared with all others. Geochemical proxies for carbonate chemistry within the calcifying fluid (cf) of both species indicated that only mean seawater pH influenced pH cf . pH treatments had no effect on proxies for Ω cf . These limited responses to extreme pH treatments demonstrate that some calcifying taxa may be capable of maintaining constant rates of calcification under ocean acidification by actively modifying Ω cf .
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author C. E. Cornwall
S. Comeau
T. M. DeCarlo
B. Moore
Q. D'Alexis
M. T. McCulloch
author_facet C. E. Cornwall
S. Comeau
T. M. DeCarlo
B. Moore
Q. D'Alexis
M. T. McCulloch
author_sort C. E. Cornwall
title Statistical results from Resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural pH variability
title_short Statistical results from Resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural pH variability
title_full Statistical results from Resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural pH variability
title_fullStr Statistical results from Resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural pH variability
title_full_unstemmed Statistical results from Resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural pH variability
title_sort statistical results from resistance of corals and coralline algae to ocean acidification: physiological control of calcification under natural ph variability
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.6936266.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Statistical_results_from_Resistance_of_corals_and_coralline_algae_to_ocean_acidification_physiological_control_of_calcification_under_natural_pH_variability/6936266
long_lat ENVELOPE(-94.367,-94.367,64.034,64.034)
geographic Shell Island
geographic_facet Shell Island
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.6936266.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Statistical_results_from_Resistance_of_corals_and_coralline_algae_to_ocean_acidification_physiological_control_of_calcification_under_natural_pH_variability/6936266
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.6936266.v1
_version_ 1766155300517183488