pH variability at volcanic CO2 seeps regulates coral calcifying fluid chemistry

Type Article
Date 2022-04
Language English
Author(s) Comeau SteeveORCID1, 2, Cornwall Christopher E.ORCID2, 3, Shlesinger Tom4, Hoogenboom Mia5, Mana Ralph6, McCulloch Malcolm T.2, Rodolfo‐metalpa Riccardo7
Affiliation(s) 1 : CNRS‐INSU Laboratoire d’Océanographie de Villefranche Sorbonne Université Villefranche‐ sur‐mer, France
2 : ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and Ocean Graduate School The University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australia, Australia
3 : School of Biological Sciences Victoria University of Wellington Wellington, New Zealand
4 : Institute for Global Ecology Florida Institute of Technology Melbourne Florida, USA
5 : ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and College of Science and Engineering James Cook University Townsville Queensland, Australia
6 : School of Natural and Physical Sciences University of Papua New Guinea Port Moresby National Capital District Papua ,New Guinea
7 : ENTROPIE IRD Université de la Réunion CNRS IFREMER Nouméa,New Caledonia
Source Global Change Biology (1354-1013) (Wiley), 2022-04 , Vol. 28 , N. 8 , P. 2751-2763
DOI 10.1111/gcb.16093
WOS© Times Cited 8
Keyword(s) abundance, calcification, calcifying fluid, coral, coral reefs, dissolved inorganic carbon, ocean acidification, Papua New Guinea
Abstract

Coral reefs are iconic ecosystems with immense ecological, economic and cultural value, but globally their carbonate-based skeletal construction is threatened by ocean acidification (OA). Identifying coral species that have specialised mechanisms to maintain high rates of calcification in the face of declining seawater pH is of paramount importance in predicting future species composition, and growth of coral reefs. Here, we studied multiple coral species from two distinct volcanic CO2 seeps in Papua New Guinea to assess their capacity to control their calcifying fluid (CF) chemistry. Several coral species living under conditions of low mean seawater pH, but with either low or high variability in seawater pH, were examined and compared with those living in ‘normal’ (non-seep) ambient seawater pH. We show that when mean seawater pH is low but highly variable, corals have a greater ability to maintain constant pHcf in their CF, but this characteristic was not linked with changes in abundance. Within less variable low pH seawater, corals with limited reductions in pHcf at the seep sites compared with controls tended to be more abundant at the seep site than at the control site. However, this finding was strongly influenced by a single species (Montipora foliosa), which was able to maintain complete pHcf homeostasis. Overall, although our findings indicate that there might be an association between ecological success and greater pHcf homeostasis, further research with additional species and at more sites with differing seawater pH regimes is required to solidify inferences regarding coral ecological success under future OA.

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Comeau Steeve, Cornwall Christopher E., Shlesinger Tom, Hoogenboom Mia, Mana Ralph, McCulloch Malcolm T., Rodolfo‐metalpa Riccardo (2022). pH variability at volcanic CO2 seeps regulates coral calcifying fluid chemistry. Global Change Biology, 28(8), 2751-2763. Publisher's official version : https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16093 , Open Access version : https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00750/86184/