Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry

It is predicted that ocean acidification (OA) threatens coral reefs worldwide, by lowering seawater pH which in turn compromises essential metabolic processes such as carbonate genesis of corals. Inshore waters however, experience different spatial and temporal carbonate chemistry variability, raisi...

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Main Author: Camp, Emma F
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repository.essex.ac.uk/15340/
http://repository.essex.ac.uk/15340/1/Ph.D.%20Emma%20Camp%20Final.pdf
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spelling ftunivessex:oai:repository.essex.ac.uk:15340 2023-05-15T17:52:01+02:00 Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry Camp, Emma F 2015-10 text http://repository.essex.ac.uk/15340/ http://repository.essex.ac.uk/15340/1/Ph.D.%20Emma%20Camp%20Final.pdf en eng http://repository.essex.ac.uk/15340/1/Ph.D.%20Emma%20Camp%20Final.pdf Camp, Emma F (2015) Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry. PhD thesis, University of Essex. Q Science (General) QD Chemistry Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2015 ftunivessex 2022-01-09T06:53:31Z It is predicted that ocean acidification (OA) threatens coral reefs worldwide, by lowering seawater pH which in turn compromises essential metabolic processes such as carbonate genesis of corals. Inshore waters however, experience different spatial and temporal carbonate chemistry variability, raising questions over the future impact of OA within these habitats. It also remains unclear whether local biogeochemical conditions of some marine habitats can buffer, or provide a refuge against OA. The thesis systematically examines the response (ecological abundance, distribution, recruitment, and metabolic expenditure) of corals that have expanded their niche into variable pH habitats, to assess both the potential impact of OA and whether any habitats may act as a refuge against its effects by: (i) establishing robust methods to measure the local carbonate chemistry and the metabolic activity of corals in situ, (ii) characterising the natural carbonate chemistry variability over different temporal and spatial scales, and evaluating the biological versus abiotic control of non-reef habitats, (iii) quantifying the metabolic expenditure of corals living within non-reef habitats and assessing whether there are similarities in the physiological responses of corals existing in different regions to ascertain commonalities, and finally (iv) testing the impact of future predicted changes in temperature and pH on the physiological responses of corals from different variability habitats. The thesis demonstrates that across bioregion sites non-reef habitats exist that have highly variable carbonate chemistry but still house corals. These non-reef habitats have very different carbonate chemistry, influencing both their own susceptibility to future OA and their potential services (buffering versus pre-conditioning) for local coral populations. Future studies can expand on this work by assessing the molecular differences of corals found within these highly-variable habitats to explore further the potential of adaptation and/or acclimatisation of coral species to low pH. Thesis Ocean acidification University of Essex Research Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of Essex Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunivessex
language English
topic Q Science (General)
QD Chemistry
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
QD Chemistry
Camp, Emma F
Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry
topic_facet Q Science (General)
QD Chemistry
description It is predicted that ocean acidification (OA) threatens coral reefs worldwide, by lowering seawater pH which in turn compromises essential metabolic processes such as carbonate genesis of corals. Inshore waters however, experience different spatial and temporal carbonate chemistry variability, raising questions over the future impact of OA within these habitats. It also remains unclear whether local biogeochemical conditions of some marine habitats can buffer, or provide a refuge against OA. The thesis systematically examines the response (ecological abundance, distribution, recruitment, and metabolic expenditure) of corals that have expanded their niche into variable pH habitats, to assess both the potential impact of OA and whether any habitats may act as a refuge against its effects by: (i) establishing robust methods to measure the local carbonate chemistry and the metabolic activity of corals in situ, (ii) characterising the natural carbonate chemistry variability over different temporal and spatial scales, and evaluating the biological versus abiotic control of non-reef habitats, (iii) quantifying the metabolic expenditure of corals living within non-reef habitats and assessing whether there are similarities in the physiological responses of corals existing in different regions to ascertain commonalities, and finally (iv) testing the impact of future predicted changes in temperature and pH on the physiological responses of corals from different variability habitats. The thesis demonstrates that across bioregion sites non-reef habitats exist that have highly variable carbonate chemistry but still house corals. These non-reef habitats have very different carbonate chemistry, influencing both their own susceptibility to future OA and their potential services (buffering versus pre-conditioning) for local coral populations. Future studies can expand on this work by assessing the molecular differences of corals found within these highly-variable habitats to explore further the potential of adaptation and/or acclimatisation of coral species to low pH.
format Thesis
author Camp, Emma F
author_facet Camp, Emma F
author_sort Camp, Emma F
title Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry
title_short Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry
title_full Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry
title_fullStr Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry
title_full_unstemmed Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry
title_sort ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry
publishDate 2015
url http://repository.essex.ac.uk/15340/
http://repository.essex.ac.uk/15340/1/Ph.D.%20Emma%20Camp%20Final.pdf
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation http://repository.essex.ac.uk/15340/1/Ph.D.%20Emma%20Camp%20Final.pdf
Camp, Emma F (2015) Ecological and physiological responses of hard corals to variations in seawater carbonate chemistry. PhD thesis, University of Essex.
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