Estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ

Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2019 Laboratory studies show that low pH and high pCO2 associated with ocean acidification can significantly affect the physiology and survival of zooplankton, with differential responses among taxa. To understand how sensitivity to ocean acidificati...

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Main Author: Keil, Katherine Elizabeth
Other Authors: Klinger, Terrie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/44356
id ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/44356
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/44356 2023-05-15T17:49:44+02:00 Estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ Keil, Katherine Elizabeth Klinger, Terrie 2019, and 3-2021 (revisions) application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1773/44356 en_US eng Keil_washington_0250O_20315.pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1773/44356 CC BY Calcification Meta-analysis Ocean acidification Puget Sound Sensitivity Zooplankton Biological oceanography Aquatic sciences Environmental science Marine affairs Thesis 2019 ftunivwashington 2023-03-12T18:59:31Z Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2019 Laboratory studies show that low pH and high pCO2 associated with ocean acidification can significantly affect the physiology and survival of zooplankton, with differential responses among taxa. To understand how sensitivity to ocean acidification varies among zooplankton taxa, I performed a meta-analysis of the published literature, focusing on eight taxonomic groups of zooplankton found in marine waters of the U.S. Pacific Northwest. According to the metaanalysis, pteropods are the taxon most sensitive to increasing levels of pCO2 and calcification is the process most severely affected, while larvaceans and metabolism are the least sensitive taxon and process, respectively, examined in this study. I hypothesized that the relative sensitivities to pCO2 reported in the literature would explain a significant amount of variation in zooplankton ii abundance in Puget Sound, WA (USA), where pCO2 is known to vary across short spatial and temporal scales. To test this hypothesis, I collected zooplankton samples and environmental data on two research cruises in June and August 2017. Copepods, a highly sensitive taxon according to the meta-analysis, were consistently the most abundant taxon, while larvaceans, the least sensitive taxon, reached high abundance in a few samples. Statistical analyses revealed that a combination of temperature, fluorescence, dissolved oxygen, and salinity was the primary determinant of zooplankton abundance at these stations during the two sampling periods. I found little association between empirical measures of station pH and the abundance of sensitive taxa as revealed by the meta-analysis, calling into question the coherence between laboratory and field studies and suggesting that sensitivity to existing levels of ocean acidification may play a subordinate role in determining the abundance of some zooplankton taxa in this inland sea. The results of this study have important ramifications for long-term monitoring programs, especially with ... Thesis Ocean acidification Copepods University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
op_collection_id ftunivwashington
language English
topic Calcification
Meta-analysis
Ocean acidification
Puget Sound
Sensitivity
Zooplankton
Biological oceanography
Aquatic sciences
Environmental science
Marine affairs
spellingShingle Calcification
Meta-analysis
Ocean acidification
Puget Sound
Sensitivity
Zooplankton
Biological oceanography
Aquatic sciences
Environmental science
Marine affairs
Keil, Katherine Elizabeth
Estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ
topic_facet Calcification
Meta-analysis
Ocean acidification
Puget Sound
Sensitivity
Zooplankton
Biological oceanography
Aquatic sciences
Environmental science
Marine affairs
description Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2019 Laboratory studies show that low pH and high pCO2 associated with ocean acidification can significantly affect the physiology and survival of zooplankton, with differential responses among taxa. To understand how sensitivity to ocean acidification varies among zooplankton taxa, I performed a meta-analysis of the published literature, focusing on eight taxonomic groups of zooplankton found in marine waters of the U.S. Pacific Northwest. According to the metaanalysis, pteropods are the taxon most sensitive to increasing levels of pCO2 and calcification is the process most severely affected, while larvaceans and metabolism are the least sensitive taxon and process, respectively, examined in this study. I hypothesized that the relative sensitivities to pCO2 reported in the literature would explain a significant amount of variation in zooplankton ii abundance in Puget Sound, WA (USA), where pCO2 is known to vary across short spatial and temporal scales. To test this hypothesis, I collected zooplankton samples and environmental data on two research cruises in June and August 2017. Copepods, a highly sensitive taxon according to the meta-analysis, were consistently the most abundant taxon, while larvaceans, the least sensitive taxon, reached high abundance in a few samples. Statistical analyses revealed that a combination of temperature, fluorescence, dissolved oxygen, and salinity was the primary determinant of zooplankton abundance at these stations during the two sampling periods. I found little association between empirical measures of station pH and the abundance of sensitive taxa as revealed by the meta-analysis, calling into question the coherence between laboratory and field studies and suggesting that sensitivity to existing levels of ocean acidification may play a subordinate role in determining the abundance of some zooplankton taxa in this inland sea. The results of this study have important ramifications for long-term monitoring programs, especially with ...
author2 Klinger, Terrie
format Thesis
author Keil, Katherine Elizabeth
author_facet Keil, Katherine Elizabeth
author_sort Keil, Katherine Elizabeth
title Estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ
title_short Estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ
title_full Estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ
title_fullStr Estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ
title_full_unstemmed Estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ
title_sort estimating relative sensitivities of zooplankton to ocean acidification and comparing to observations in situ
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/1773/44356
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Ocean acidification
Copepods
genre_facet Ocean acidification
Copepods
op_relation Keil_washington_0250O_20315.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/1773/44356
op_rights CC BY
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