Description from NSF award abstract:
Rising sea surface temperatures and ocean acidification (OA) may threaten the ability of calcified organisms to build carbonate reefs, but it is unclear if particular reefs have the capacity to tolerate global change. Current understanding of the effects of OA on coral reefs originates from single-species laboratory studies largely focused on scleractinian corals. Traditionally, these experiments attempt to mimic static future conditions under the assumption that coastal regimes are as constant as -- and will acidify at the same rate as -- open ocean surface waters. Predictions based on these oversimplified scenarios are unrealistic because numerous benthic organisms, including calcifiers and primary producers, significantly alter the bulk seawater carbonate chemistry over a diurnal cycle. Further, the prevalence of recently appreciated extreme diel fluctuations in pH across some reefs suggests that benthic species may be acclimated to future carbonate conditions.
To look for potential OA refugia on reefs, a research team from the Scripps Institute of Oceanography (University of California at San Diego) and the Lamont Dougherty Earth Observatory (Columbia University) will undertake a unique mechanistic study on Palmyra Atoll, a remote uninhabited island in the central Pacific that lacks degradation from local human influence. They will explore the strengths and controls of biogeochemical feedbacks from coral reef benthic community assemblages to the seawater chemistry above and experimentally determine how this natural fluctuation affects physiological responses of key taxa to OA. Specifically they will: (1) tightly integrate a novel benthic flux technique in situ that allows continuous, high-temporal resolution measurements of net ecosystem metabolic rates (production and calcification) with an ongoing high spatial resolution benthic community dynamics study to quantify feedbacks of known species assemblages to observed natural spatiotemporal variability in seawater carbonate chemistry; and (2) use small scale common garden CO2 enrichment experiments and productivity/respiration assays in the lab paired with reciprocal transplant experiments in situ to empirically quantify the effects of elevated and/or fluctuating pCO2 on growth, calcification and photophysiology of common framework building organisms and their benthic competitors. This should allow them to examine the coupled interactions between OA and diverse benthic coral reef organisms in their natural environment in the absence of other confounding human impacts.
Dataset | Latest Version Date | Current State |
---|---|---|
Benthic Ecosystem and Acidification Measuring System (BEAMS) data from two Bermuda sites collected during 2015 (BEAMS project) | 2017-11-21 | Final no updates expected |
Benthic Ecosystem and Acidification Measuring System (BEAMS) data from two sites on the western terrace of the Palmyra Atoll collected during 2014 (BEAMS project) | 2016-11-29 | Final no updates expected |
Lead Principal Investigator: Jennifer Smith
University of California-San Diego (UCSD-SIO)
Principal Investigator: Wade McGillis
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO)
Co-Principal Investigator: Todd R. Martz
University of California-San Diego (UCSD-SIO)
Co-Principal Investigator: Nichole N. Price
Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences
Co-Principal Investigator: Yuichiro Takeshita
Carnegie Institution for Science (CIS)
Contact: Yuichiro Takeshita
Carnegie Institution for Science (CIS)
Data Management Plan received by BCO-DMO on 26 July 2016. (81.04 KB)
07/28/2016