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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Environmental context. Approximately 25 % of CO2 released to the atmosphere by human activities has been absorbed by the oceans, resulting in ocean acidification. We investigate the acidification effects on marine phytoplankton and subsequent production of the trace gas dimethylsulfide, a major route for sulfur transfer from the oceans to the atmosphere. Increasing surface water CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) affects the growth of phytoplankton groups to different degrees, resulting in varying responses in community production of dimethylsulfide. Abstract. The human-induced rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide since the industrial revolution has led to increasing oceanic carbon uptake and changes in seawater carbonate chemistry, resulting in lowering of surface water pH. In this study we investigated the effect of increasing CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) on concentrations of volatile biogenic dimethylsulfide (DMS) and its precursor dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), through monoculture studies and community pCO2 perturbation. DMS is a climatically important gas produced by many marine algae: it transfers sulfur into the atmosphere and is a major influence on biogeochemical climate regulation through breakdown to sulfate and formation of subsequent cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). Overall, production of DMS and DMSP by the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi strain RCC1229 was unaffected by growth at 900 μatm pCO2, but DMSP production normalised to cell volume was 12 % lower at the higher pCO2 treatment. These cultures were compared with community DMS and DMSP production during an elevated pCO2 mesocosm experiment with the aim of studying E. huxleyi in the natural environment. Results contrasted with the culture experiments and showed reductions in community DMS and DMSP concentrations of up to 60 and 32 % respectively at pCO2 up to 3000 μatm, with changes attributed to poorer growth of DMSP-producing nanophytoplankton species, including E. huxleyi, and potentially increased microbial consumption of DMS and dissolved DMSP at higher pCO2. DMS and DMSP production differences between culture and community likely arise from pH affecting the inter-species responses between microbial producers and consumers.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
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    Wissenschaftliche Auswertungen
    In:  In: Warnsignal Klima: Die Meeres – Änderungen und Risiken. , ed. by Lozan, J. L., Graßl, H., Karbe, L. and Reise, K. Buchreihe "Warnsignale" . Wissenschaftliche Auswertungen, Hamburg, Germany, pp. 172-176.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-13
    Description: Consequences of the ocean acidification to biological processes: The dissolution of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2 ) into the ocean is causing a series of chemical changes: an increase in CO2 concentration, a decrease in calcium carbonate saturation and pH, and a change in the chemistry of many biologically important chemical species (see Chapter 3.9 for details). These chemical changes will affect a range of biological processes in marine organisms, including the precipitation of calcium carbonate, fixation of CO_2 and nitrogen, pumping of hydrogen ions to regulate internal pH, and uptake of nutrients for growth. This chapter focuses on biological processes that are likely to be affected by acidification and how these effects on individual organisms may scale up to the ecosystem level.
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    Wissenschaftliche Auswertungen
    In:  In: Warnsignal Klima: Die Meeres – Änderungen und Risiken. , ed. by Lozan, J. L., Graßl, H., Karbe, L. and Reise, K. Buchreihe "Warnsignale" . Wissenschaftliche Auswertungen, Hamburg, Germany, pp. 159-162.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-13
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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