Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel.
University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Glob Chang Biol. 2017 Oct;23(10):4346-4353. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13729. Epub 2017 May 29.
Shallow marine calcifiers play an important role as marine ecosystem engineers and in the global carbon cycle. Understanding their response to warming is essential to evaluate the fate of marine ecosystems under global change scenarios. A rare opportunity to test the effect of warming acting on natural ecosystems is by investigation of heat-polluted areas. Here, we study growth and calcification in benthic foraminifera that inhabit a thermally polluted coastal area in Israel, where they are exposed to elevated temperatures reaching up to ~42°C in summer. Live specimens of two known heat-tolerant species Lachlanella sp. 1 and Pararotalia calcariformata were collected over a period of 1 year from two stations, representing thermally polluted and undisturbed (control) shallow hard bottom habitats. Single-chamber element ratios of these specimens were obtained using laser ablation, and the Mg/Ca of the most recently grown final chambers were used to calculate their calcification temperatures. Our results provide the first direct field evidence that these foraminifera species not only persist at extreme warm temperatures but continue to calcify and grow. Species-specific Mg/Ca thermometry indicates that P. calcariformata precipitate their shells at temperatures as high as 40°C and Lachlanella sp. 1 at least up to 36°C, but both species show a threshold for calcification at cold temperatures: calcification in P. calcariformata only occurred above 22°C and in Lachlanella sp. 1 above 15°C. Our observations from the heat-polluted area indicate that under future warming scenarios, calcification in heat-tolerant foraminifera species will not be inhibited during summer, but instead the temperature window for their calcification will be expanded throughout much of the year. The observed inhibition of calcification at low temperatures indicates that the role of heat-tolerant foraminifera in carbonate production will most likely increase in future decades.
浅海钙化生物作为海洋生态系统工程师和全球碳循环的重要组成部分发挥着重要作用。了解它们对变暖的反应对于评估海洋生态系统在全球变化情景下的命运至关重要。测试变暖对自然生态系统影响的一个难得机会是通过调查受热污染的地区。在这里,我们研究了栖息在以色列受热带污染沿海地区的底栖有孔虫的生长和钙化作用,在那里它们暴露在夏季高达约 42°C 的高温下。我们从两个代表受热污染和未受干扰(对照)浅硬底生境的站点收集了两种已知耐热物种拉克兰氏菌 1 号和帕拉罗塔利亚卡利卡里福塔塔的有生命标本,为期一年。使用激光烧蚀获得这些标本的单室元素比,并使用最新生长的最后几个房室的 Mg/Ca 来计算它们的钙化温度。我们的研究结果首次提供了直接的野外证据,证明这些有孔虫物种不仅在极端高温下存活,而且还继续钙化和生长。种特异性 Mg/Ca 测温表明,P. calcariformata 的贝壳沉淀温度高达 40°C,拉克兰氏菌 1 号至少高达 36°C,但两种物种都对低温钙化有阈值:P. calcariformata 的钙化仅在 22°C 以上发生,拉克兰氏菌 1 号的钙化仅在 15°C 以上发生。我们在受热污染区的观察表明,在未来的变暖情景下,耐热有孔虫物种的钙化在夏季不会受到抑制,而是它们的钙化温度窗口将在一年中的大部分时间扩大。低温下钙化的观察抑制表明,耐热有孔虫在碳酸盐生产中的作用在未来几十年内很可能会增加。