Seawater carbonate chemistry and Emiliania huxleyi mass and size, 2011

View Dataset
Beaufort, Luc;Probert, Ian;de Garidel-Thoron, Thibault;Bendif, E M;Ruiz-Pino, Diana;Metzi, N;Goyet, Catherine;Buchet, Noëlle;Coupel, Pierre;Grelaud, Michaël;Rost, Björn;Rickaby, Rosalind E M;De Vargas, Colomban

Description

About one-third of the carbon dioxide (CO2) released into the atmosphere as a result of human activity has been absorbed by the oceans, where it partitions into the constituent ions of carbonic acid. This leads to ocean acidification, one of the major threats to marine ecosystems and particularly to calcifying organisms such as corals, foraminifera and coccolithophores. Coccolithophores are abundant phytoplankton that are responsible for a large part of modern oceanic carbonate production. Culture experiments investigating the physiological response of coccolithophore calcification to increased CO2 have yielded contradictory results between and even within species. Here we quantified the calcite mass of dominant coccolithophores in the present ocean and over the past forty thousand years, and found a marked pattern of decreasing calcification with increasing partial pressure of CO2 and concomitant decreasing concentrations of CO3. Our analyses revealed that differentially calcified species and morphotypes are distributed in the ocean according to carbonate chemistry. A substantial impact on the marine carbon cycle might be expected upon extrapolation of this correlation to predicted ocean acidification in the future. However, our discovery of a heavily calcified Emiliania huxleyi morphotype in modern waters with low pH highlights the complexity of assemblage-level responses to environmental forcing factors.

Citations (1)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

2.3

FAIR Score

92%

Citations

1

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

PANGAEA

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Global and Planetary Change

Field

Environmental Science

Domain

Physical Sciences

Confidence Score

99%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

AntarcticEmiliania huxleyiIndian OceanNorth AtlanticNorth PacificPhytoplanktonSouth AtlanticSouth PacificSample IDLATITUDELONGITUDEAge, datedEmiliania huxleyi, weightEmiliania huxleyi, weight, standard errorEmiliania huxleyi, diameterReplicatesSalinityTemperature, waterAlkalinity, totalCarbon, inorganic, dissolvedpH, seawater scalePartial pressure of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air)Carbonate ionCarbonate system computation flagpH, total scaleCarbon dioxideFugacity of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air)Bicarbonate ionAragonite saturation stateCalcite saturation stateEstimated by measuring brightness in cross-polarized light (birefringence)Measured and/or detected by SYRACO softwareCTD, Sea-Bird SBE 911plusTitration potentiometricCalculated using CO2SYSCalculated 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

15.38

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00