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Differential sensitivity of a symbiont‐bearing foraminifer to seawater carbonate chemistry in a decoupled DIC‐pH experiment

Differential sensitivity of a symbiont‐bearing foraminifer to seawater carbonate chemistry in a decoupled DIC‐pH experiment
Differential sensitivity of a symbiont‐bearing foraminifer to seawater carbonate chemistry in a decoupled DIC‐pH experiment
Larger benthic foraminifera (LBF) are unicellular eukaryotic calcifying organisms and an important component of tropical and subtropical modern and ancient oceanic ecosystems. They are major calcium carbonate producers and important contributors to primary production due to the photosynthetic activity of their symbiotic algae. Studies investigating the response of LBF to seawater carbonate chemistry changes are therefore essential for understanding the impact of climate changes and ocean acidification (OA) on shallow marine ecosystems. In this study, calcification, respiration, and photosynthesis of the widespread diatom-bearing LBF Operculina ammonoides were measured in laboratory experiments that included manipulation of carbonate chemistry parameters. pH was altered while keeping dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) constant, and DIC was altered while keeping pH constant. The results show clear vulnerability of O. ammonoides to low pH and CO32− under constant DIC conditions, and no increased photosynthesis or calcification under high DIC concentrations. Our results call into question previous hypotheses, suggesting that mechanisms such as the degree of cellular control on calcification site pH/DIC and/or enhanced symbiont photosynthesis in response to OA may render the hyaline (perforate and calcitic-radial) LBF to be less responsive to OA than porcelaneous LBF. In addition, manipulating DIC did not affect calcification when pH was close to present seawater levels in a model encompassing the total population size range. In contrast, larger individuals (>1,200 μm, >1 mg) were sensitive to changes in DIC, a phenomenon we attribute to their physiological requirement to concentrate large quantities of DIC for their calcification process.
2169-8953
Oron, Shai
f3506b44-77b8-4bf8-b003-423f921908db
Evans, David
878c65c7-eab9-4362-896b-166e165eb94b
Abramovich, Sigal
4d85eb8b-1c54-4ca3-9838-83c97b35ede4
Almogi‐Labin, Ahuva
1eab8dbf-05d3-4b8a-848e-21e370d29a6a
Erez, Jonathan
ed56a557-377e-4b63-8ba8-3d23e506e5c0
Oron, Shai
f3506b44-77b8-4bf8-b003-423f921908db
Evans, David
878c65c7-eab9-4362-896b-166e165eb94b
Abramovich, Sigal
4d85eb8b-1c54-4ca3-9838-83c97b35ede4
Almogi‐Labin, Ahuva
1eab8dbf-05d3-4b8a-848e-21e370d29a6a
Erez, Jonathan
ed56a557-377e-4b63-8ba8-3d23e506e5c0

Oron, Shai, Evans, David, Abramovich, Sigal, Almogi‐Labin, Ahuva and Erez, Jonathan (2020) Differential sensitivity of a symbiont‐bearing foraminifer to seawater carbonate chemistry in a decoupled DIC‐pH experiment. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 125 (9), [e2020JG005726]. (doi:10.1029/2020JG005726).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Larger benthic foraminifera (LBF) are unicellular eukaryotic calcifying organisms and an important component of tropical and subtropical modern and ancient oceanic ecosystems. They are major calcium carbonate producers and important contributors to primary production due to the photosynthetic activity of their symbiotic algae. Studies investigating the response of LBF to seawater carbonate chemistry changes are therefore essential for understanding the impact of climate changes and ocean acidification (OA) on shallow marine ecosystems. In this study, calcification, respiration, and photosynthesis of the widespread diatom-bearing LBF Operculina ammonoides were measured in laboratory experiments that included manipulation of carbonate chemistry parameters. pH was altered while keeping dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) constant, and DIC was altered while keeping pH constant. The results show clear vulnerability of O. ammonoides to low pH and CO32− under constant DIC conditions, and no increased photosynthesis or calcification under high DIC concentrations. Our results call into question previous hypotheses, suggesting that mechanisms such as the degree of cellular control on calcification site pH/DIC and/or enhanced symbiont photosynthesis in response to OA may render the hyaline (perforate and calcitic-radial) LBF to be less responsive to OA than porcelaneous LBF. In addition, manipulating DIC did not affect calcification when pH was close to present seawater levels in a model encompassing the total population size range. In contrast, larger individuals (>1,200 μm, >1 mg) were sensitive to changes in DIC, a phenomenon we attribute to their physiological requirement to concentrate large quantities of DIC for their calcification process.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 29 July 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 August 2020
Published date: 10 September 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502308
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502308
ISSN: 2169-8953
PURE UUID: 0cb822d7-ae8a-43c5-93dc-43763ea9c119
ORCID for David Evans: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8685-671X

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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2025 16:30
Last modified: 28 Jun 2025 04:05

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Contributors

Author: Shai Oron
Author: David Evans ORCID iD
Author: Sigal Abramovich
Author: Ahuva Almogi‐Labin
Author: Jonathan Erez

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