Combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: Acropora solitaryenis and Porites heronensis

A recent poleward shift of hermatypic corals’ distribution has been reported and was attributed to the increase in sea temperature since the pre-industrial revolution. Ocean acidification and predicted increasing variability of sea surface temperatures, may together limit this shift in the future. T...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lugué, Klervi
Other Authors: Santos, Rui, Agostini, Sylvain
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/15351
id ftunivalgarve:oai:sapientia.ualg.pt:10400.1/15351
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivalgarve:oai:sapientia.ualg.pt:10400.1/15351 2023-05-15T17:50:05+02:00 Combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: Acropora solitaryenis and Porites heronensis Lugué, Klervi Santos, Rui Agostini, Sylvain 2020-12-10 http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/15351 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/15351 202684890 openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ CC-BY Corais hermatypic Alterações climáticas Acidificação oceânica Stress frio Japão Domínio/Área Científica::Ciências Naturais::Outras Ciências Naturais masterThesis 2020 ftunivalgarve 2022-05-30T08:49:35Z A recent poleward shift of hermatypic corals’ distribution has been reported and was attributed to the increase in sea temperature since the pre-industrial revolution. Ocean acidification and predicted increasing variability of sea surface temperatures, may together limit this shift in the future. The objective of this study was to investigate whether a tipping point exists in the physiological and metabolic responses of Acropora solitaryensis and Porites heronensis, to CO2, under average winter temperature and under cold event temperature (cold stress; -4°C decrease).We studied the effects of increased partial pressures of CO2 (pCO2) from 294 ppm to 5018 ppm, on a set of metabolic parameters. The light and dark calcification, skeletal growth rate, chlorophyll and protein concentrations decreased linearly as a function of increasing partial pCO2 in A. solitaryensis. In comparison only the dark calcification and skeletal growth rate decreased linearly as a function of increasing partial pCO2 in P. heronensis. For both species, the cold stress acted as an additional stress to the pCO2 exposure, except for the respiration in P. heronensis. No physiological tipping point has been identified, beyond which these coral species were no longer capable of carrying out the functions necessary to their survival. The lack of a clear tipping point, as well as the emergence of potential ‘ecological winners’, here P. heronensis, in the face of decreasing pH and cold temperature stress, indicate that in the coming decades the species composition of coral reefs is likely to slowly change, to a new composition in which surviving in marginal high latitudes are those that show the required potential for adaptation. Our study highlights the substantial advantages of the regression method to predict the impacts of ocean acidification. Resolving high resolution relationships between metabolism and pCO2 could greatly improve the accuracy of models describing the effects of future ocean acidification on calcifying organisms and marine ... Master Thesis Ocean acidification Universidade do Algarve: Sapienta
institution Open Polar
collection Universidade do Algarve: Sapienta
op_collection_id ftunivalgarve
language English
topic Corais hermatypic
Alterações climáticas
Acidificação oceânica
Stress frio
Japão
Domínio/Área Científica::Ciências Naturais::Outras Ciências Naturais
spellingShingle Corais hermatypic
Alterações climáticas
Acidificação oceânica
Stress frio
Japão
Domínio/Área Científica::Ciências Naturais::Outras Ciências Naturais
Lugué, Klervi
Combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: Acropora solitaryenis and Porites heronensis
topic_facet Corais hermatypic
Alterações climáticas
Acidificação oceânica
Stress frio
Japão
Domínio/Área Científica::Ciências Naturais::Outras Ciências Naturais
description A recent poleward shift of hermatypic corals’ distribution has been reported and was attributed to the increase in sea temperature since the pre-industrial revolution. Ocean acidification and predicted increasing variability of sea surface temperatures, may together limit this shift in the future. The objective of this study was to investigate whether a tipping point exists in the physiological and metabolic responses of Acropora solitaryensis and Porites heronensis, to CO2, under average winter temperature and under cold event temperature (cold stress; -4°C decrease).We studied the effects of increased partial pressures of CO2 (pCO2) from 294 ppm to 5018 ppm, on a set of metabolic parameters. The light and dark calcification, skeletal growth rate, chlorophyll and protein concentrations decreased linearly as a function of increasing partial pCO2 in A. solitaryensis. In comparison only the dark calcification and skeletal growth rate decreased linearly as a function of increasing partial pCO2 in P. heronensis. For both species, the cold stress acted as an additional stress to the pCO2 exposure, except for the respiration in P. heronensis. No physiological tipping point has been identified, beyond which these coral species were no longer capable of carrying out the functions necessary to their survival. The lack of a clear tipping point, as well as the emergence of potential ‘ecological winners’, here P. heronensis, in the face of decreasing pH and cold temperature stress, indicate that in the coming decades the species composition of coral reefs is likely to slowly change, to a new composition in which surviving in marginal high latitudes are those that show the required potential for adaptation. Our study highlights the substantial advantages of the regression method to predict the impacts of ocean acidification. Resolving high resolution relationships between metabolism and pCO2 could greatly improve the accuracy of models describing the effects of future ocean acidification on calcifying organisms and marine ...
author2 Santos, Rui
Agostini, Sylvain
format Master Thesis
author Lugué, Klervi
author_facet Lugué, Klervi
author_sort Lugué, Klervi
title Combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: Acropora solitaryenis and Porites heronensis
title_short Combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: Acropora solitaryenis and Porites heronensis
title_full Combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: Acropora solitaryenis and Porites heronensis
title_fullStr Combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: Acropora solitaryenis and Porites heronensis
title_full_unstemmed Combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: Acropora solitaryenis and Porites heronensis
title_sort combined effects of ocean acidification and low temperature on two range expanding hermatypic corals: acropora solitaryenis and porites heronensis
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/15351
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/15351
202684890
op_rights openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
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