Photochemical responses of the diatom Skeletonema costatum grown under elevated CO2 concentrations to short-term changes in pH

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Zheng, Y;Giordano, Mario;Gao, Kunshan

Description

Variability in pH is a common occurrence in many aquatic environments, due to physical, chemical and biological processes. In coastal waters, lagoons, estuaries and inland waters, pH can change very rapidly (within seconds or hours) in addition to daily and seasonal changes. At the same time, progressive ocean acidification caused by anthropogenic CO2 emissions is superimposed on these spatial and temporal pH changes. Photosynthetic organisms are therefore unavoidably subject to significant pH variations at the cell surface. Whether this will affect their response to long-term ocean acidification is still unknown, nor is it known whether the short-term sensitivity to pH change is affected by the pCO2 to which the cells are acclimated. We posed the latter open question as our experimental hypothesis: Does acclimation to seawater acidification affect the response of phytoplankton to acute pH variations? The diatom Skeletonema costatum, commonly found in coastal and estuarine waters where short-term acute changes in pH frequently occur, was selected to test the hypothesis. Diatoms were grown at both 390 (pH 8.2, low CO2; LC) and 1000 (pH 7.9, high CO2; HC) µatm CO2 for at least 20 generations, and photosynthetic responses to short-term and acute changes in pH (between 8.2 and 7.6) were investigated. The effective quantum yield of LC-grown cells decreased by ca. 70% only when exposed to pH 7.6; this was not observed when exposed to pH 7.9 or 8.2. HC-grown cells did not show significant responses in any pH treatment. Non-photochemical quenching showed opposite trends. In general, our results indicate that while LC-grown cells are rather sensitive to acidification, HC-grown cells are relatively unresponsive in terms of photochemical performance.

Citations (1)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

2.6

FAIR Score

92%

Citations

1

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

PANGAEA

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Environmental Chemistry

Field

Environmental Science

Domain

Physical Sciences

Confidence Score

54%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Keywords

Bottles or small containers/Aquaria (<20 L)ChromistaLaboratory experimentLaboratory strainsNorth PacificOchrophytaPelagosPhytoplanktonPrimary production/PhotosynthesisSingle speciesSkeletonema costatumSpeciesFigureTreatmentTime in minutesEffective quantum yieldEffective quantum yield, standard deviationMaximum photochemical quantum yield of photosystem IIMaximum photochemical quantum yield of photosystem II, standard deviationNon photochemical quenchingNon photochemical quenching, standard deviationIrradianceTime point, descriptiveElectron transport rate, relativeElectron transport rate, relative, standard deviationInitial slope of rapid light curveInitial slope of rapid light curve, standard deviationTemperature, waterSalinityPartial pressure of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air)Partial pressure of carbon dioxide, standard deviationpH, NBS scalepH, standard deviationCarbon, inorganic, dissolvedCarbon, inorganic, dissolved, standard deviationBicarbonate ionBicarbonate ion, standard deviationCarbonate ionCarbonate ion, standard deviationCarbon dioxideCarbon dioxide, standard deviationAlkalinity, totalAlkalinity, total, standard deviationCarbonate system computation flagpH, total scaleFugacity of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air)Aragonite saturation stateCalcite saturation stateCalculated using CO2SYSPotentiometricCoulometric titrationCalculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. (2010)Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre (OA-ICC)

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00