| Literature DB >> 28533519 |
Catherine V Davis1,2, Emily B Rivest3,4, Tessa M Hill5,3, Brian Gaylord3,6, Ann D Russell5, Eric Sanford3,6.
Abstract
Anthropogenically-forced changes in ocean chemistry at both the global and regional scale have the potential to negatively impact calcifying plankton, which play a key role in ecosystem functioning and marine carbon cycling. We cultured a globally important calcifying marine plankter (the foraminifer, Globigerina bulloides) under an ecologically relevant range of seawater pH (7.5 to 8.3 total scale). Multiple metrics of calcification and physiological performance varied with pH. At pH > 8.0, increased calcification occurred without a concomitant rise in respiration rates. However, as pH declined from 8.0 to 7.5, calcification and oxygen consumption both decreased, suggesting a reduced ability to precipitate shell material accompanied by metabolic depression. Repair of spines, important for both buoyancy and feeding, was also reduced at pH < 7.7. The dependence of calcification, respiration, and spine repair on seawater pH suggests that foraminifera will likely be challenged by future ocean conditions. Furthermore, the nature of these effects has the potential to actuate changes in vertical transport of organic and inorganic carbon, perturbing feedbacks to regional and global marine carbon cycling. The biological impacts of seawater pH have additional, important implications for the use of foraminifera as paleoceanographic indicators.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28533519 PMCID: PMC5440396 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-01530-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Mean calcification in Globigerina bulloides as measured by calcein uptake (average pixel intensity), with respect to (a) pH and (b) [CO3 2−]. Error bars show standard deviation in both the x and y directions. These data are fit with a linear model with a 95% confidence envelope. The R2 and p-value refer to the fit of individual foraminifera to this curve (data for individual foraminifera can be found in Supplementary Data).
Figure 2Patterns of calcein incorporation from Globigerina bulloides in culture. Several examples of the different patterns in shell calcification seen from foraminifera collected on the same date. Individuals F24 (a), F34 (c), and F40 (e) did not form a chamber in culture, although calcification occurred over the entire shell in F24, was focused on select chambers in F34 and was minimal in F40. Foraminifera F19 (b), F36 (d), and F44 (f) all grew a chamber with F19 showing calcification in both the new chamber as well as over the rest of the shell, F36 calcified most heavily in the new chamber and less over the rest of the shell, and F44 calcified primarily in the new chamber.
Figure 3Percentage of individual foraminifera that regrew spines at each of four pH conditions. The number of days between experiment start and regrowth are shown in patterned bars. After 5 days, significant differences were found between foraminifera exposed to pH 7.5 vs. pH 8.0 and 8.3 (ANOVA; F3,83 = 13.64; p-value < 0.01).
Figure 4Oxygen consumption of Globigerina bulloides in response to changing carbonate chemistry conditions. Average rate of oxygen consumption for foraminifera over 24 hours, normalized to the longest shell diameter relative to the (a) pH and (b) [CO3 2−] of exposure conditions (data for individual foraminifera can be found in Supplementary Data). Error bars show standard deviation in both the x and y directions. Data are fit with a 3rd order polynomial with a 95% confidence envelope.
Potential changes in foraminiferal contribution to CaCO3 and POC flux, and the ‘rain ratio’.
| Location | Average Foraminifera Flux (μg m−1 day−1) | Average CaCO3 Flux (μg m−1 day−1) | Average POC Flux (μg m−1 day−1) | Change in CaCO3 Flux (%) | Change in POC Flux (%) | Change in Rain Ratio (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Santa Barbara Basin (Coastal Upwelling) | 6350[ | 181000[ | 96000[ | 1% | <1% | 2% |
| Station Papa (Open Ocean) | 12110[ | 12000[ | 15000[ | 38% | 9% | 43% |
| Cariaco Basin (Equatorial Upwelling) | 14495[ | 37000[ | 34000[ | 15% | 5% | 19% |
| Global Average | 0.36 Gt/y-0.88 Gt/y[ | 1.1 Gt/y[ | 0.86 Gt/y[ | 12–30% | 5–11% | 15–38% |
Fluxes are taken from the deepest available published sediment-trap measurements at each site for Santa Barbara Basin (500 m) in the Southern California Current System, Station Papa (1000 m) in the North Pacific, and Cariaco Basin (1200 m) in the tropical Atlantic[56–61]. Global averages assume a depth of >1000 m and are based on a range of potential contributions of foraminifera calcite to CaCO3 flux at depth[21, 61–63].