Mineralogical response of the Mediterranean crustose coralline alga Lithophyllum cabiochae to near-future ocean acidification and warming
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Nash, Merinda C.
Martin, Sophie
Gattuso, Jean-Pierre
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European Geosciences Union (EGU)
Abstract
Red calcareous coralline algae are thought to
be among the organisms most vulnerable to ocean acidification
due to the high solubility of their magnesium calcite
skeleton. Although skeletal mineralogy is proposed to
change as CO2 and temperature continue to rise, there is
currently very little information available on the response of
coralline algal carbonate mineralogy to near-future changes
in pCO2 and temperature. Here we present results from a
1-year controlled laboratory experiment to test mineralogical
responses to pCO2 and temperature in the Mediterranean
crustose coralline alga (CCA) Lithophyllum cabiochae. Our
results show that Mg incorporation is mainly constrained
by temperature (+1 mol % MgCO3 for an increase of 3 ◦C),
and there was no response to pCO2. This suggests that L.
cabiochae thalli have the ability to buffer their calcifying
medium against ocean acidification, thereby enabling them
to continue to deposit magnesium calcite with a significant
mol % MgCO3 under elevated pCO2. Analyses of CCA dissolution
chips showed a decrease in Mg content after 1 year
for all treatments, but this was affected neither by pCO2
nor by temperature. Our findings suggest that biological processes
exert a strong control on calcification on magnesium
calcite and that CCA may be more resilient under rising CO2
than previously thought. However, previously demonstrated
increased skeletal dissolution with ocean acidification will still have major consequences for the stability and maintenance
of Mediterranean coralligenous habitats.
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Biogeosciences
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Open Access