Why corals care about ocean acidification : uncovering the mechanism
Why corals care about ocean acidification : uncovering the mechanism
Date
2009-12
Authors
Cohen, Anne L.
Holcomb, Michael
Holcomb, Michael
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DOI
10.5670/oceanog.2009.102
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Abstract
Stony corals build hard skeletons of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) by
combining calcium with carbonate ions derived, ultimately, from seawater. The
concentration of carbonate ions relative to other carbonate species in seawater
is rather low, so corals expend energy to raise the pH of seawater sequestered in
an isolated, extracellular compartment where crystal growth occurs. This action
converts plentiful bicarbonate ions to the carbonate ions required for calcification,
allowing corals to produce CaCO3 about 100 times faster than it could otherwise
form. It is this rapid and efficient production of CaCO3 crystals that enables
corals to build coral reefs.
Ocean acidification reduces the pH and thus the abundance of carbonate ions in
seawater. Corals living in acidified seawater continue to produce CaCO3 and expend
as much energy as their counterparts in normal seawater to raise the pH of the calcifying
fluid. However, in acidified seawater, corals are unable to elevate the concentration
of carbonate ions to the level required for normal skeletal growth. In several
experiments, we found that boosting the energetic status of corals by enhanced
heterotrophic feeding or moderate increases in inorganic nutrients helped to offset
the negative impact of ocean acidification. However, this built-in defense is unlikely
to benefit corals as levels of CO2 in the atmosphere continue to rise. Most climate
models predict that the availability of inorganic nutrients and plankton in the surface
waters where corals live will decrease as a consequence of global warming. Thus,
corals and coral reefs may be significantly more vulnerable to ocean acidification
than previously thought.
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Author Posting. © Oceanography Society, 2009. This article is posted here by permission of Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 22 no. 4 (2009): 118-127.
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Oceanography 22 no. 4 (2009): 118-127