Seagrass can mitigate negative ocean acidification effects on calcifying algae.

Ellie Bergstrom, João Silva, Cíntia Martins, Paulo Horta
Author Information
  1. Ellie Bergstrom: School of Environment & Science and Australian Rivers Institute - Nathan Campus, Griffith University, 170 Kessels Road, Brisbane, Nathan, Queensland, 4111, Australia. ellie.bergstrom@griffithuni.edu.au.
  2. João Silva: CCMar - Centre of Marine Sciences, University of Algarve, Campus of Gambelas, 8005-139, Faro, Portugal.
  3. Cíntia Martins: Department of Ecology and Zoology, Center for Biological Sciences, Federal University of Santa Catarina, 88010-970, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil.
  4. Paulo Horta: Department of Ecology and Zoology, Center for Biological Sciences, Federal University of Santa Catarina, 88010-970, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil.

Abstract

The ultimate effect that ocean acidification (OA) and warming will have on the physiology of calcifying algae is still largely uncertain. Responses depend on the complex interactions between seawater chemistry, global/local stressors and species-specific physiologies. There is a significant gap regarding the effect that metabolic interactions between coexisting species may have on local seawater chemistry and the concurrent effect of OA. Here, we manipulated CO and temperature to evaluate the physiological responses of two common photoautotrophs from shallow tropical marine coastal ecosystems in Brazil: the calcifying alga Halimeda cuneata, and the seagrass Halodule wrightii. We tested whether or not seagrass presence can influence the calcification rate of a widespread and abundant species of Halimeda under OA and warming. Our results demonstrate that under elevated CO, the high photosynthetic rates of H. wrightii contribute to raise H. cuneata calcification more than two-fold and thus we suggest that H. cuneata populations coexisting with H. wrightii may have a higher resilience to OA conditions. This conclusion supports the more general hypothesis that, in coastal and shallow reef environments, the metabolic interactions between calcifying and non-calcifying organisms are instrumental in providing refuge against OA effects and increasing the resilience of the more OA-susceptible species.

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MeSH Term

Aquatic Organisms
Brazil
Carbon Dioxide
Chlorophyta
Ecosystem
Magnoliopsida
Seawater

Chemicals

Carbon Dioxide

Word Cloud

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