Benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean

Changes in CaCO3 dissolution due to ocean acidification are potentially more important than changes in calcification to the future accretion and survival of coral reef ecosystems. As most CaCO3 in coral reefs is stored in old permeable sediments, increasing sediment dissolution due to ocean acidific...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eyre, Bradley D, Andersson, Andreas J, Cyronak, Tyler
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: ePublications@SCU 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epubs.scu.edu.au/esm_pubs/2427
https://epubs.scu.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3440&context=esm_pubs
id ftsoutherncu:oai:epubs.scu.edu.au:esm_pubs-3440
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsoutherncu:oai:epubs.scu.edu.au:esm_pubs-3440 2023-05-15T17:48:53+02:00 Benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean Eyre, Bradley D Andersson, Andreas J Cyronak, Tyler 2014-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://epubs.scu.edu.au/esm_pubs/2427 https://epubs.scu.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3440&context=esm_pubs unknown ePublications@SCU School of Environment, Science and Engineering Papers Environmental Sciences article 2014 ftsoutherncu 2019-08-06T13:14:29Z Changes in CaCO3 dissolution due to ocean acidification are potentially more important than changes in calcification to the future accretion and survival of coral reef ecosystems. As most CaCO3 in coral reefs is stored in old permeable sediments, increasing sediment dissolution due to ocean acidification will result in reef loss even if calcification remains unchanged. Previous studies indicate that CaCO3 dissolution could be more sensitive to ocean acidification than calcification by reef organisms. Observed changes in net ecosystem calcification owing to ocean acidification could therefore be due mainly to increased dissolution rather than decreased calcification. In addition, biologically mediated calcification could potentially adapt, at least partially, to future ocean acidification, while dissolution, which is mostly a geochemical response to changes in seawater chemistry, will not adapt. Here, we review the current knowledge of shallow-water CaCO3 dissolution and demonstrate that dissolution in the context of ocean acidification has been largely overlooked compared with calcification. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification Southern Cross University: epublications@SCU
institution Open Polar
collection Southern Cross University: epublications@SCU
op_collection_id ftsoutherncu
language unknown
topic Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Environmental Sciences
Eyre, Bradley D
Andersson, Andreas J
Cyronak, Tyler
Benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean
topic_facet Environmental Sciences
description Changes in CaCO3 dissolution due to ocean acidification are potentially more important than changes in calcification to the future accretion and survival of coral reef ecosystems. As most CaCO3 in coral reefs is stored in old permeable sediments, increasing sediment dissolution due to ocean acidification will result in reef loss even if calcification remains unchanged. Previous studies indicate that CaCO3 dissolution could be more sensitive to ocean acidification than calcification by reef organisms. Observed changes in net ecosystem calcification owing to ocean acidification could therefore be due mainly to increased dissolution rather than decreased calcification. In addition, biologically mediated calcification could potentially adapt, at least partially, to future ocean acidification, while dissolution, which is mostly a geochemical response to changes in seawater chemistry, will not adapt. Here, we review the current knowledge of shallow-water CaCO3 dissolution and demonstrate that dissolution in the context of ocean acidification has been largely overlooked compared with calcification.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Eyre, Bradley D
Andersson, Andreas J
Cyronak, Tyler
author_facet Eyre, Bradley D
Andersson, Andreas J
Cyronak, Tyler
author_sort Eyre, Bradley D
title Benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean
title_short Benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean
title_full Benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean
title_fullStr Benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean
title_full_unstemmed Benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean
title_sort benthic coral reef calcium carbonate dissolution in an acidifying ocean
publisher ePublications@SCU
publishDate 2014
url https://epubs.scu.edu.au/esm_pubs/2427
https://epubs.scu.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3440&context=esm_pubs
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source School of Environment, Science and Engineering Papers
_version_ 1766155040824754176