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Ocean Acidification on the California Coast| Responses of Marine Bryozoa to a High CO2 Future

<p> As a result of human activities, the level of CO<sub>2</sub> in the Earth&rsquo;s atmosphere has increased by nearly 40% since the industrial revolution. The rate of green house gas emission is accelerating, with current trends exceeding those predicted by &ldquo;worst case&rdquo; global climate change scenarios. The chemistry of the ocean is fundamentally changing as a result of increasing atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub>, which dissolves in seawater, making it more acidic, a process referred to as ocean acidification (OA). A rapidly expanding body of science is now being generated to understand the impact of this global environmental change. To date, most studies evaluating OA effects have centered on simplified laboratory analyses that expose single populations to short-term treatments in order to quantify responses of individuals. These designs offer a limited assessment of the degree to which phenotypic plasticity and local adaptation might influence the response of populations to OA. </p><p> To address these questions, I carried out studies on members of Phylum Bryozoa, a species-rich clade of calcified colonial marine invertebrates distributed throughout the global ocean. Bryozoans were selected as a model system for this work because the clade exhibits a broad array of growth and calcification strategies, and because of the relative paucity of data regarding their expected response to future acidification. In addition, bryozoans can be subdivided into genetically identical replicate clones, which can then be assigned to separate treatments, allowing variation across treatments to be uniquely partitioned into the variance components of statistical models. In order to culture bryozoans for comparative experiments, I designed and constructed a new flow-through OA system at the Bodega Marine Laboratory, capable of finely manipulating both the temperature and carbonate chemistry of seawater, allowing for controlled laboratory experiments of long duration. </p><p> In Chapter 1, I performed a comparative 9-month laboratory experiment examining the effects of ocean acidification on the native Californian bryozoan <i> Celleporella cornuta. C. cornuta</i> was sampled from two regions of coastline that experience different oceanographic conditions associated with variation in the intensity of coastal upwelling. Under different CO<sub>2 </sub> treatments, the biology of this bryozoan was observed to be remarkably plastic. Colonies raised under high CO<sub>2</sub> grew more quickly, invested less in reproduction, and produced skeletons that were lighter compared to genetically identical clones raised under current atmospheric values. Bryozoans held in high CO<sub>2</sub> conditions reduced their investment in skeletal carbonate, changed the Mg/Ca ratio of skeletal walls and increased the expression of organic coverings that may serve a protective function. Differences between populations in growth, reproductive investment, and the frequency of organic covering production were consistent with adaptive responses to persistent variation in local oceanographic conditions. </p><p> In Chapter 2, I tested whether skeletal mineralogy can vary plastically in some invertebrates using the cosmopolitan bryozoan <i>Membranipora tuberculata</i> as a model. In a 6-month laboratory experiment, I cultured genetic clones of <i>M. tuberculata</i> under a factorial design with varying food availability, temperature, and dissolved CO<sub>2</sub> concentrations. Elevated food availability increased growth in colonies while cold temperatures and high CO<sub>2</sub> induced degeneration of colony zooids. However, colonies were able to maintain equivalent growth efficiencies under cold, high CO<sub>2</sub> conditions, suggesting a compensatory tradeoff whereby colonies increase the degeneration of older zooids under adverse conditions, redirecting this energy to the maintenance of growth. Elevated food and cold temperatures also decreased Mg concentrations in skeletal material, and this skeletal material dissolved less readily under high CO<sub>2</sub> conditions. This suggests that these factors interact synergistically to affect dissolution potential in this and other species. </p><p> Finally, in Chapter 3, I explore stable isotope values for &delta;<sup> 18</sup>O and &delta;<sup>13</sup>C in the calcium carbonate structures of the bryozoan <i>Membranipora tuberculata</i>. I tested whether this species accurately records both temperature and pH variability during periods of coastal upwelling by analyzing &delta;<sup>18</sup>O and &delta;<sup> 13</sup>C in colonies grown in the field and in controlled laboratory cultures. Field-grown colonies were out planted next to a Durafet<sup>&reg;</sup> pH sensor, which provided a high-resolution record of the temperature and pH conditions these colonies experienced. &delta;<sup>13</sup>C was found to negatively co-vary with pH in both laboratory and field growth, and calculated field temperatures derived from laboratory &delta;<sup>18</sup>O temperature calibrations aligned with the records from the pH sensor. &delta;<sup>18 </sup>O<sub>c</sub> values were more depleted under low pH in laboratory trials, which stands in contrast to patterns observed in other taxa. This may indicate that <i>Membranipora</i> utilizes bicarbonate ion (HCO<sub> 3</sub><sup>-</sup>) in its calcification pathway, and could help explain why many bryozoan species appear to exhibit enhanced growth under high CO<sub> 2</sub> conditions. (Abstract shortened by ProQuest.)</p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:10036209
Date23 March 2016
CreatorsSwezey, Daniel Sergio
PublisherUniversity of California, Davis
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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