Temperature affects the morphology and calcification of Emiliania huxleyi strains


Autoria(s): Rosas-Navarro, Anaid; Langer, Gerald; Ziveri, Patrizia
Data(s)

04/05/2016

Resumo

The global warming debate has sparked an unprecedented interest in temperature effects on coccolithophores. The calcification response to temperature changes reported in the literature, however, is ambiguous. The two main sources of this ambiguity are putatively differences in experimental setup and strain-specificity. In this study we therefore compare three strains isolated in the North Pacific under identical experimental conditions. Three strains of Emiliania huxleyi type A were grown under non-limiting nutrient and light conditions, at 10, 15, 20 and 25 ºC. All three strains displayed similar growth rate versus temperature relationships, with an optimum at 20-25 ºC. Elemental production (particulate inorganic carbon (PIC), particulate organic carbon (POC), total particulate nitrogen (TPN)), coccolith mass, coccolith size, and width of the tube elements cycle were positively correlated with temperature over the sub-optimum to optimum temperature range. The correlation between PIC production and coccolith mass/size supports the notion that coccolith mass can be used as a proxy for PIC production in sediment samples. Increasing PIC production was significantly positively correlated with the percentage of incomplete coccoliths in one strain only. Generally, coccoliths were heavier when PIC production was higher. This shows that incompleteness of coccoliths is not due to time shortage at high PIC production. Sub-optimal growth temperatures lead to an increase in the percentage of malformed coccoliths in a strain-specific fashion. Since in total only six strains have been tested thus far, it is presently difficult to say whether sub-optimal temperature is an important factor causing malformations in the field. The most important parameter in biogeochemical terms, the PIC:POC, shows a minimum at optimum growth temperature in all investigated strains. This clarifies the ambiguous picture featuring in the literature, i.e. discrepancies between PIC:POC-temperature relationships reported in different studies using different strains and different experimental setups. In summary, global warming might cause a decline in coccolithophore's PIC contribution to the rain ratio, as well as improved fitness in some genotypes due to less coccolith malformations.

Formato

text/tab-separated-values, 1130 data points

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.860214

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.860214

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Rosas-Navarro, Anaid; Langer, Gerald; Ziveri, Patrizia (2016): Temperature affects the morphology and calcification of Emiliania huxleyi strains. Biogeosciences Discussions, 1-22, doi:10.5194/bg-2015-591

Palavras-Chave #Alkalinity, total; Bicarbonate ion; Bottle number; Calcite saturation state; Calcium carbonate production per cell; Calculated; Calculated using CO2SYS; Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Carbon, inorganic, particulate, per cell; Carbon, organic, particulate, per cell; Carbonate ion; Carbon dioxide; Coccoliths, incomplete; Concentration per cell; Estimated by measuring brightness in cross-polarized light (birefringence); Growth rate; Identification; Length; Malformation rate; Mass; Mediterranean Sea Acidification in a Changing Climate; MedSeA; Nitrogen, total particulate production per cell; Partial pressure of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air); Particulate inorganic carbon/particulate organic carbon ratio; Particulate inorganic carbon production per cell; pH; Potentiometric titration; Production of particulate organic carbon per cell; Ratio; Scanning electron microscope (SEM); Slope; Species; Strain; Temperature, water; TOC analyzer (Shimadzu); Total particulate carbon per cell; Total particulate carbon production per cell; Width
Tipo

Dataset