Seawater carbonate chemistry, calcification and shell size of hard clam Mercenaria mercenaria during experiments, 2011

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Waldbusser, George G;Bergschneider, Heather;Green, Mark A

Description

Increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide threatens to decrease pH in the world's oceans. Coastal and estuarine calcifying organisms of significant ecological and economical importance are at risk; however, several biogeochemical processes drive pH in these habitats. In particular, coastal and estuarine sediments are frequently undersaturated with respect to calcium carbonate due to high rates of organic matter remineralization, even when overlying waters are saturated. As a result, the post-larval stages of infaunal marine bivalves must be able to deposit new shell material in conditions that are corrosive to shell. We measured calcification rates on the hard clam, Mercenaria spp.,in 5 post-larval size classes (0.39, 0.56, 0.78, 0.98, and 2.90 mm shell height) using the alkalinity anomaly method. Acidity of experimental water was controlled by bubbling with air-CO2 blends to obtain pH values of 8.02, 7.64, and 7.41, corresponding to pCO2 values of 424, 1120, and 1950 µatm. These pH values are typical of those found in many near-shore terrigenous marine sediments. Our results show that calcification rate decreased with lower pH in all 5 size classes measured. We also found a significant effect of size on calcification rate, with the smaller post-larval sizes unable to overcome dissolution pressure. Increased calcification rate with size allowed the larger sizes to overcome dissolution pressure and deposit new shell material under corrosive conditions. Size dependency of pH effects on calcification is likely due to organogenesis and developmental shifts in shell mineralogy occurring through the post-larval stage. Furthermore, we found significantly different calcification rates between the 2 sources of hard clams we used for these experiments, most likely due to genotypic differences. Our findings confirm the susceptibility of the early life stages of this important bivalve to decreasing pH and reveal mechanisms behind the increased mortality in post-larval juvenile hard clams related to dissolution pressure, that has been found in previous studies.

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

Biomaterials

Field

Materials Science

Domain

Physical Sciences

Confidence Score

97%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

AnimaliaBenthic animalsBenthosBottles or small containers/Aquaria (<20 L)Calcification/DissolutionLaboratory experimentLaboratory strainsMercenaria mercenariaMolluscaNorth AtlanticSingle speciesIdentificationSpeciesSalinityTemperature, waterpH, seawater scaleAlkalinity, totalAragonite saturation stateCalcification rate of calcium carbonateCalcification rate, standard deviationMercenaria mercenaria, shell sizeCarbonate system computation flagpH, total scaleCarbon dioxidePartial pressure of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air)Fugacity of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air)Bicarbonate ionCarbonate ionCarbon, inorganic, dissolvedCalcite saturation statepH meter (Thermo Fisher Scientific)MeasuredCalculated using CO2SYSAlkalinity anomaly technique (Smith and Key, 1975)Calculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. (2010)European network of excellence for Ocean Ecosystems Analysis (EUR-OCEANS)European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA)Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre (OA-ICC)

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00