Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Proc Biol Sci. 2010 May 7;277(1686):1409-15. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2009.2069. Epub 2010 Jan 6.
Predictions about the ecological consequences of oceanic uptake of CO(2) have been preoccupied with the effects of ocean acidification on calcifying organisms, particularly those critical to the formation of habitats (e.g. coral reefs) or their maintenance (e.g. grazing echinoderms). This focus overlooks the direct effects of CO(2) on non-calcareous taxa, particularly those that play critical roles in ecosystem shifts. We used two experiments to investigate whether increased CO(2) could exacerbate kelp loss by facilitating non-calcareous algae that, we hypothesized, (i) inhibit the recovery of kelp forests on an urbanized coast, and (ii) form more extensive covers and greater biomass under moderate future CO(2) and associated temperature increases. Our experimental removal of turfs from a phase-shifted system (i.e. kelp- to turf-dominated) revealed that the number of kelp recruits increased, thereby indicating that turfs can inhibit kelp recruitment. Future CO(2) and temperature interacted synergistically to have a positive effect on the abundance of algal turfs, whereby they had twice the biomass and occupied over four times more available space than under current conditions. We suggest that the current preoccupation with the negative effects of ocean acidification on marine calcifiers overlooks potentially profound effects of increasing CO(2) and temperature on non-calcifying organisms.
关于海洋吸收 CO(2) 的生态后果的预测一直集中在海洋酸化对钙化生物的影响上,特别是对栖息地形成(如珊瑚礁)或其维持(如食草棘皮动物)至关重要的生物。这种关注忽视了 CO(2) 对非钙化类群的直接影响,特别是那些在生态系统变化中起关键作用的生物。我们使用了两个实验来研究增加的 CO(2) 是否会通过促进非钙化藻类而加剧巨藻的损失,我们假设这些藻类:(i) 抑制城市化海岸的巨藻林恢复,以及 (ii) 在适度的未来 CO(2) 和相关温度升高下形成更广泛的覆盖和更大的生物量。我们对一个相移系统(即巨藻-草皮为主)的草皮进行了实验性去除,结果表明巨藻的幼苗数量增加,这表明草皮可以抑制巨藻的繁殖。未来的 CO(2) 和温度协同作用对藻类草皮的丰度产生了积极影响,其生物量是当前条件下的两倍,占据的可用空间是当前条件下的四倍多。我们认为,目前对海洋钙化生物酸化的负面影响的关注,忽视了不断增加的 CO(2) 和温度对非钙化生物可能产生的深远影响。