TY - JOUR
T1 - Response of the Miliolid iArchaias angulatus/i to Simulated Ocean Acidification
AU - Knorr, Paul O.
AU - Robbins, Lisa L.
AU - Harries, Peter J.
AU - Hallock, Pamela
AU - Wynn, Jonathan G
AU - Muller, Pamela Hallock
PY - 2014/1/1
Y1 - 2014/1/1
N2 - A common, but not universal, effect of ocean acidification on benthic foraminifera is a reduction in the growth rate. The miliolid Archaias angulatus is a high-Mg (>4 mole% MgCO 3 ), symbiont-bearing, soritid benthic foraminifer that contributes to Caribbean reef carbonate sediments. A laboratory culture study assessed the effects of reduced pH on the growth of A. angulatus . We observed a statistically significant 50% reduction in the growth rate (p < 0.01), calculated from changes in maximum diameter, from 160 μm/28 days in the pH 8.0/pCO 2 air 480 ppm control group to 80 μm/28 days at a treatment level of pH 7.6/pCO 2 air 1328 ppm. Additionally, pseudopore area, δ 18 O values, and Mg/Ca ratio all increased, albeit slightly in the latter two variables. The reduction in growth rate indicates that under a high-CO 2 setting, future A. angulatus populations will consist of smaller adults. A model using the results of this study estimates that at pH 7.6 A. angulatus carbonate production in the South Florida reef tract and Florida Bay decreases by 85%, from 0.27 Mt/yr to 0.04 Mt/yr, over an area of 9,000 km 2 .
AB - A common, but not universal, effect of ocean acidification on benthic foraminifera is a reduction in the growth rate. The miliolid Archaias angulatus is a high-Mg (>4 mole% MgCO 3 ), symbiont-bearing, soritid benthic foraminifer that contributes to Caribbean reef carbonate sediments. A laboratory culture study assessed the effects of reduced pH on the growth of A. angulatus . We observed a statistically significant 50% reduction in the growth rate (p < 0.01), calculated from changes in maximum diameter, from 160 μm/28 days in the pH 8.0/pCO 2 air 480 ppm control group to 80 μm/28 days at a treatment level of pH 7.6/pCO 2 air 1328 ppm. Additionally, pseudopore area, δ 18 O values, and Mg/Ca ratio all increased, albeit slightly in the latter two variables. The reduction in growth rate indicates that under a high-CO 2 setting, future A. angulatus populations will consist of smaller adults. A model using the results of this study estimates that at pH 7.6 A. angulatus carbonate production in the South Florida reef tract and Florida Bay decreases by 85%, from 0.27 Mt/yr to 0.04 Mt/yr, over an area of 9,000 km 2 .
UR - https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/geo_facpub/1020
UR - https://doi.org/10.2113/gsjfr.45.2.109
UR - https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/msc_facpub/910
U2 - 10.2113/gsjfr.45.2.109
DO - 10.2113/gsjfr.45.2.109
M3 - Article
VL - 45
JO - Journal of Foramineferal Research
JF - Journal of Foramineferal Research
ER -