School of Geography and Sustainable Development, University of St. Andrews, St Andrews, Scotland.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Essex, Colchester, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2019 Aug 21;14(8):e0220046. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0220046. eCollection 2019.
Foraminifera are expected to be particularly susceptible to future changes in ocean carbonate chemistry as a function of increased atmospheric CO2. Studies in an experimental recirculating seawater system were performed with a dominant benthic foraminiferal species collected from intertidal mudflats. We investigated the experimental impacts of ocean acidification on survival, growth/calcification, morphology and the biometric features of a calcareous species Elphidium williamsoni. Foraminifera were exposed for 6 weeks to four different pH treatments that replicated future scenarios of a high CO2 atmosphere resulting in lower seawater pH. Results revealed that declining seawater pH caused a decline in foraminiferal survival rate and growth/calcification (mainly through test weight reduction). Scanning electron microscopy image analysis of live specimens at the end of the experimental period show changes in foraminiferal morphology with clear signs of corrosion and cracking on the test surface, septal bridges, sutures and feeding structures of specimens exposed to the lowest pH conditions. These findings suggest that the morphological changes observed in shell feeding structures may serve to alter: (1) foraminiferal feeding efficiency and their long-term ecological competitiveness, (2) the energy transferred within the benthic food web with a subsequent shift in benthic community structures and (3) carbon cycling and total CaCO3 production, both highly significant processes in coastal waters. These experimental results open-up the possibility of modelling future impacts of ocean acidification on both calcification and dissolution in benthic foraminifera within mid-latitude intertidal environments, with potential implications for understanding the changing marine carbon cycle.
有孔虫类预计将特别容易受到未来海洋碳酸盐化学变化的影响,因为大气中的二氧化碳增加了。在一个实验性的循环海水系统中进行了研究,使用从潮间带泥滩收集的优势底栖有孔虫物种。我们研究了海洋酸化对一种钙质物种 Elphidium williamsoni 的生存、生长/钙化、形态和生物计量特征的实验影响。有孔虫类在四种不同的 pH 值处理下暴露了 6 周,这些处理复制了高 CO2 大气导致海水 pH 值降低的未来情景。结果表明,海水 pH 值下降导致有孔虫类的存活率和生长/钙化率下降(主要通过测试重量减轻)。在实验结束时对活标本进行扫描电子显微镜图像分析,显示有孔虫形态发生变化,在暴露于最低 pH 值条件下的标本的测试表面、隔板桥、缝合线和进食结构上有明显的腐蚀和裂纹迹象。这些发现表明,在壳进食结构中观察到的形态变化可能会改变:(1)有孔虫类的进食效率及其长期的生态竞争力,(2)在底栖食物网内传递的能量,随后底栖群落结构发生变化,以及(3)碳循环和总 CaCO3 产生,这些都是沿海水域中非常重要的过程。这些实验结果为在中纬度潮间带环境中模拟海洋酸化对底栖有孔虫类钙化和溶解的未来影响开辟了可能性,这对理解不断变化的海洋碳循环具有潜在意义。