Influence of Ocean Acidification on a Natural Winter-to-Summer Plankton Succession : First Insights from a Long-Term Mesocosm Study Draw Attention to Periods of Low Nutrient Concentrations (Volume 11, Number 8)

Every year, the oceans absorb about 30% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) leading to a re-equilibration of the marine carbonate system and decreasing seawater pH. Today, there is increasing awareness that these changes–summarized by the term ocean acidification (OA)–could differentially affect t...

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Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Bach, Lennart T., Taucher, Jan, Boxhammer, Tim
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLOS) 2016
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159068
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.0hrkef 2023-05-15T17:51:05+02:00 Influence of Ocean Acidification on a Natural Winter-to-Summer Plankton Succession : First Insights from a Long-Term Mesocosm Study Draw Attention to Periods of Low Nutrient Concentrations (Volume 11, Number 8) Bach, Lennart T. Taucher, Jan Boxhammer, Tim 2016-08-15 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159068 https://openresearchlibrary.org/ext/api/media/541a6660-bc9a-4f98-9a02-2c2d46e9f2d0/assets/external_content.pdf https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/541a6660-bc9a-4f98-9a02-2c2d46e9f2d0 en eng Public Library of Science (PLOS) doi:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159068 10670/1.0hrkef https://openresearchlibrary.org/ext/api/media/541a6660-bc9a-4f98-9a02-2c2d46e9f2d0/assets/external_content.pdf https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/541a6660-bc9a-4f98-9a02-2c2d46e9f2d0 lic_creative-commons Open Research Library envir geo Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2016 fttriple https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159068 2023-01-22T18:13:20Z Every year, the oceans absorb about 30% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) leading to a re-equilibration of the marine carbonate system and decreasing seawater pH. Today, there is increasing awareness that these changes–summarized by the term ocean acidification (OA)–could differentially affect the competitive ability of marine organisms, thereby provoking a restructuring of marine ecosystems and biogeochemical element cycles. In winter 2013, we deployed ten pelagic mesocosms in the Gullmar Fjord at the Swedish west coast in order to study the effect of OA on plankton ecology and biogeochemistry under close to natural conditions. Five of the ten mesocosms were left unperturbed and served as controls (~380 ?atm pCO2), whereas the others were enriched with CO2-saturated water to simulate realistic end-of-the-century carbonate chemistry conditions (~760 ?atm pCO2). We ran the experiment for 113 days which allowed us to study the influence of high CO2 on an entire winter-to-summer plankton succession and to investigate the potential of some plankton organisms for evolutionary adaptation to OA in their natural environment. This paper is the first in a PLOS collection and provides a detailed overview on the experimental design, important events, and the key complexities of such a “long-term mesocosm” approach. Furthermore, we analyzed whether simulated end-of-the-century carbonate chemistry conditions could lead to a significant restructuring of the plankton community in the course of the succession. At the level of detail analyzed in this overview paper we found that CO2-induced differences in plankton community composition were non-detectable during most of the succession except for a period where a phytoplankton bloom was fueled by remineralized nutrients. These results indicate: (1) Long-term studies with pelagic ecosystems are necessary to uncover OA-sensitive stages of succession. (2) Plankton communities fueled by regenerated nutrients may be more responsive to changing carbonate chemistry than those having ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification Unknown PLOS ONE 11 8 e0159068
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic envir
geo
spellingShingle envir
geo
Bach, Lennart T.
Taucher, Jan
Boxhammer, Tim
Influence of Ocean Acidification on a Natural Winter-to-Summer Plankton Succession : First Insights from a Long-Term Mesocosm Study Draw Attention to Periods of Low Nutrient Concentrations (Volume 11, Number 8)
topic_facet envir
geo
description Every year, the oceans absorb about 30% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) leading to a re-equilibration of the marine carbonate system and decreasing seawater pH. Today, there is increasing awareness that these changes–summarized by the term ocean acidification (OA)–could differentially affect the competitive ability of marine organisms, thereby provoking a restructuring of marine ecosystems and biogeochemical element cycles. In winter 2013, we deployed ten pelagic mesocosms in the Gullmar Fjord at the Swedish west coast in order to study the effect of OA on plankton ecology and biogeochemistry under close to natural conditions. Five of the ten mesocosms were left unperturbed and served as controls (~380 ?atm pCO2), whereas the others were enriched with CO2-saturated water to simulate realistic end-of-the-century carbonate chemistry conditions (~760 ?atm pCO2). We ran the experiment for 113 days which allowed us to study the influence of high CO2 on an entire winter-to-summer plankton succession and to investigate the potential of some plankton organisms for evolutionary adaptation to OA in their natural environment. This paper is the first in a PLOS collection and provides a detailed overview on the experimental design, important events, and the key complexities of such a “long-term mesocosm” approach. Furthermore, we analyzed whether simulated end-of-the-century carbonate chemistry conditions could lead to a significant restructuring of the plankton community in the course of the succession. At the level of detail analyzed in this overview paper we found that CO2-induced differences in plankton community composition were non-detectable during most of the succession except for a period where a phytoplankton bloom was fueled by remineralized nutrients. These results indicate: (1) Long-term studies with pelagic ecosystems are necessary to uncover OA-sensitive stages of succession. (2) Plankton communities fueled by regenerated nutrients may be more responsive to changing carbonate chemistry than those having ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bach, Lennart T.
Taucher, Jan
Boxhammer, Tim
author_facet Bach, Lennart T.
Taucher, Jan
Boxhammer, Tim
author_sort Bach, Lennart T.
title Influence of Ocean Acidification on a Natural Winter-to-Summer Plankton Succession : First Insights from a Long-Term Mesocosm Study Draw Attention to Periods of Low Nutrient Concentrations (Volume 11, Number 8)
title_short Influence of Ocean Acidification on a Natural Winter-to-Summer Plankton Succession : First Insights from a Long-Term Mesocosm Study Draw Attention to Periods of Low Nutrient Concentrations (Volume 11, Number 8)
title_full Influence of Ocean Acidification on a Natural Winter-to-Summer Plankton Succession : First Insights from a Long-Term Mesocosm Study Draw Attention to Periods of Low Nutrient Concentrations (Volume 11, Number 8)
title_fullStr Influence of Ocean Acidification on a Natural Winter-to-Summer Plankton Succession : First Insights from a Long-Term Mesocosm Study Draw Attention to Periods of Low Nutrient Concentrations (Volume 11, Number 8)
title_full_unstemmed Influence of Ocean Acidification on a Natural Winter-to-Summer Plankton Succession : First Insights from a Long-Term Mesocosm Study Draw Attention to Periods of Low Nutrient Concentrations (Volume 11, Number 8)
title_sort influence of ocean acidification on a natural winter-to-summer plankton succession : first insights from a long-term mesocosm study draw attention to periods of low nutrient concentrations (volume 11, number 8)
publisher Public Library of Science (PLOS)
publishDate 2016
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159068
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genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Open Research Library
op_relation doi:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159068
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