Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8886267 | Marine Environmental Research | 2018 | 39 Pages |
Abstract
Coastal areas display natural large environmental variability such as frequent changes in salinity, pH, and carbonate chemistry. Anthropogenic impacts - especially ocean acidification - increase this variability, which may affect the living conditions of coastal species, particularly, calcifiers. We performed culture experiments on living benthic foraminifera to study the combined effects of lowered pH and salinity on the calcification abilities and survival of the coastal, calcitic species Ammonia sp. and Elphidium crispum. We found that in open ocean conditions (salinity â¼35) and lower pH than usual values for these species, the specimens displayed resistance to shell (test) dissolution for a longer time than in brackish conditions (salinity â¼5 to 20). However, the response was species specific as Ammonia sp. specimens survived longer than E. crispum specimens when placed in the same conditions of salinity and pH. Living, decalcified juveniles of Ammonia sp. were observed and we show that desalination is one cause for the decalcification. Finally, we highlight the ability of foraminifera to survive under Ωcalcâ¯<â¯1, and that high salinity and [Ca2+] as building blocks are crucial for the foraminiferal calcification process.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Oceanography
Authors
Laurie M. Charrieau, Helena L. Filipsson, Yukiko Nagai, Sachiko Kawada, Karl Ljung, Emma Kritzberg, Takashi Toyofuku,