Changes in salinity impact nitrogen removal and carbon preservation in coastal wetlands sediment

Highlights

  • Coastal freshening suppressed N removal via denitrification while accelerating net organic carbon mineralization.
  • Salinity shaped N removal vs. N retention and carbonate vs. alkalinity balance through sulfate availability.
  • Salinity changes had concurrent implications for coastal eutrophication and ocean acidification.

Abstract

Coastal wetlands naturally remediate nitrogen (N) pollution through microbial pathways that either remove reactive N via denitrification and anammox, or retain it via dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA). The balance among three processes is closely linked to the carbon (C) cycle, as both heterotrophic denitrification and DNRA consume organic C and release alkalinity. While salinity fluctuations can disrupt these processes through direct ionic stress or sulfur (S) cycling, their net impact on N removal and C preservation services remains unclear. Here, we deployed microcosm experiments using mangrove sediments under a large salinity gradient (0-30 psu). We quantified N transformation rates using 15N isotope tracing technique, combined with geochemical analysis, and functional genes quantification. Freshening from ambient 30 psu to 10 psμ decreased N removal efficiency by ∼20%. This decline was caused by reduced denitrification, whereas anammox and DNRA were unaffected. Meanwhile, lower salinity appears to have stimulated C decomposition via reduced ionic stress. The reduced sulfate input diminished total alkalinity (TA) generation relative to dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). The stoichiometric shift of TA:DIC ratio could further contribute to acidification in adjacent coastal waters. Additionally, the S-mediated regulation of N partitioning appears to be nitrate-dependent: under nitrate limitation, higher sulfate favored N retention; conversely, with enriched nitrate, it potentially favored N removal. Integrating the coupling effect of salinity on interaction between N, C and S cycles, our study demonstrates that coastal water freshening may weaken wetlands’ ability to remove N and preserve C.

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Ocean acidification, more than warming or heatwaves, constrains shoaling behaviour in a range-extending fish through habitat simplification

  1. Social context is a critical yet underexplored determinant of behavioural resilience to climate change. Group living can buffer individuals against environmental stress through enhanced vigilance, reduced predation risk and improved foraging efficiency.
  2. However, whether these behavioural expressions persist under chronic (warming, acidification) and acute (marine heatwaves) climate stressors remains unclear. Using natural climate analogues spanning present-day, ocean warming and combined warming–acidification reefs, we quantified how shoal size influences behavioural expression in a range-extending reef fish (Pomacentrus coelestis).
  3. Across all climate conditions, fish in larger shoals consistently exhibited higher foraging and activity levels and reduced risk-avoidance behaviours, whereas direct effects of warming, acidification and heatwaves on behaviour were negligible.
  4. In contrast, ocean acidification most likely constrained collective behaviour indirectly by simplifying benthic habitats, where fish densities were 84% lower than at the warming reef, resulting in shoals that were up to 79% smaller than the Warming and Control reefs.
  5. Combined, our data suggest that shoal size mediates behavioural expression between foraging and predator avoidance and that acidification-driven habitat simplification can alter behavioural expression indirectly by reducing fish densities and the formation of large shoals.
  6. We conclude that climate change can indirectly modify behavioural expression in shoal-forming fishes through habitat-driven erosion of social structure.
Continue reading ‘Ocean acidification, more than warming or heatwaves, constrains shoaling behaviour in a range-extending fish through habitat simplification’

Impacts of ocean acidification and warming (OAW) on abalone growth and reproduction: a dynamic energy budget model approach across SSP scenarios

Ocean acidification and warming (OAW) are expected to alter physiology, growth and reproduction of marine ectotherms, yet their combined effects on life-history traits remain unresolved, particularly under poorly defined future food conditions. Using a Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) model, we investigated how interacting changes in temperature, seawater pH, and food quality may shape somatic growth and reproductive phenology of the European abalone Haliotis tuberculata across four contrasting coastal environments and three Shared Socioeconomic Pathway (SSP) climate scenarios. OAW effects were modeled as increased metabolic maintenance costs, while reduced food quality, driven by OAW, lowered assimilation efficiency, aligning with experimentally-supported limited compensatory feeding.,Our results reveal that warming and food quality strongly drive somatic growth, whit ocean acidification playing a minor role within the modeled range. Food quality remained the primary determinant of maximum body size, while warming amplified growth across all locations, with the largest proportional increases in cooler northern bays. Individuals in the warmest areas remained the largest across scenarios within the model framework. Reproductive timing also shifted consistently, with first spawning occurring markedly earlier under end-of-century conditions, advancing consistently with scenario intensity. Food quality modulated reproductive investment but had weaker effects on the timing of first spawning., These findings highlight that food quality critically mediates organismal responses to OAW and can offset temperature-driven gains in growth and reproduction. By combining expected nutritional constraints with SSP scenarios, our DEB-based approach provide mechanistic insights into the future responses of benthic marine invertebrates to climate change, highlighting the value of these scenario-based projections for better management strategies.

Continue reading ‘Impacts of ocean acidification and warming (OAW) on abalone growth and reproduction: a dynamic energy budget model approach across SSP scenarios’

BMSC and partners receive CRBS grant

We are excited to spread the word that BMSC and our partner and neighbor, Nova Harvest, along with the Hakai Institute and the BC Shellfish Growers Association, have received one of the CRBS (Climate Ready BC Seafood) Program Grants! This grant provided funds for research that helps understand the impacts of ocean acidification and hypoxia on the province’s seafood so that we can mitigate the issues and improve the resiliency of organisms that we rely on for food.

The partners are using various ocean observing instruments,  such as the Burke-o-later, to monitor ocean parameters in sea water. This monitoring allows for both research on how shellfish respond to changes and as a daily monitoring tool. Having this live data allows the team to react in real-time, improving the survival of and production of shellfish. 

Watch the video to learn more about the project

Ocean acidification and hypoxia threaten British Columbia’s coastal food security. This short documentary highlights some of the 11 projects funded by a $2M funding envelope provided by the Province of British Columbia to create the Climate Ready BC Seafood Program. Learn more about how these groups are working to further our understand the impacts of ocean acidification and hypoxia in BC to provide knowledge for mitigation and adaptation that supports enhancing the resiliency of BC’s seafood.

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Large-scale atmospheric circulation and its impact on the Baltic Sea region: controls, predictability and consequences

Large-scale Euro-Atlantic variability, shaped by the polar jet stream, governs weather and climate in the Baltic Sea region, thereby impacting the physical and biogeochemical properties of the Baltic Sea ecosystem. This review synthesizes how key atmospheric circulation features and modes of climate variability, including the North Atlantic Oscillation, atmospheric blocking and the Atlantic Multidecadal Variability, influence the Baltic Sea region. By integrating evidence from the published literature, observational datasets, and both global and regional climate model simulations, we assess established as well as potential linkages to key climatic variables, including temperature, precipitation, and storm activity, across temporal scales ranging from synoptic events to multidecadal variability. We then evaluate how these climate controls cascade into ecosystem-relevant processes, namely oxygen dynamics, primary productivity and ocean acidification. Although physical links are already established, the pathways connecting large-scale atmospheric patterns to biogeochemistry are still poorly constrained, partly because dedicated field studies and targeted model experiments are limited. We outline priority research needs to enhance near-term predictability and reduce uncertainty in future projections for the Baltic Sea.

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Extending planktic foraminiferal Mg/Ca palaeothermometry into polar temperature ranges: crust- and lamellae specific calibrations and non-thermal controls

The rapidity of climate change in the polar regions underscores the need for improved understanding of its impacts on ocean circulation at both regional and global scales. Reconstructions of past polar ocean-cryosphere interactions can provide this context, but large uncertainties in existing proxies limit the utility of such studies. For instance, there are currently no low-temperature (<9 °C) culture-based Mg/Ca-calibrations for planktic foraminifera, a key tool for reconstructing past changes in ocean temperatures. There is also limited understanding of non-thermal influences on Mg/Ca in Neogloboquadrina pachyderma, the only modern polar planktic foraminifera. Moreover, this species exhibits considerable levels of heterogeneity in composition precipitating a thick lower-Mg/Ca outer crust over higher Mg/Ca inner lamellae calcite; specimens with predominantly, albeit variable crust–lamellae proportions, are thus thought to introduce substantial uncertainty into high-latitude palaeotemperature reconstructions. Here, we used N. pachyderma cultured across a range of temperatures, salinities, and carbonate chemistry conditions including experiments in which pH and [CO32-] either covaried or were decoupled. By using a laser ablation approach to analyse crust and lamellae separately, we present new Mg/Ca-temperature calibrations for each component that extend culture-based calibrations in N. pachyderma down to the lower temperature-range (2–9 °C). The crust-specific calibration is of particular importance in high-latitude downcore records where N. pachyderma are commonly observed to preserve predominantly or only crust. Our results show significant carbonate chemistry influence on Mg/Ca with opposite influences from pH and carbonate ion concentration, when these variables changed in isolation. Additionally, we show that environmental conditions regulate crust-lamellar proportions, where increased salinity and temperature, and lower pH lead to less crust formation with implications for future ocean acidification and Arctic Atlantification, and for downcore reconstructions.

Continue reading ‘Extending planktic foraminiferal Mg/Ca palaeothermometry into polar temperature ranges: crust- and lamellae specific calibrations and non-thermal controls’

Newly discovered microbial world helps protect developing lobsters

As ocean temperatures rise and marine ecosystems change, scientists are working to understand how valuable species like the American lobster will respond. New research from William & Mary’s Batten School of Coastal & Marine Sciences & VIMS suggests one source of resilience may come from the microscopic bacterial communities living on lobster embryos.

The study, published in Scientific Reports, found that lobster eggs host surprisingly diverse microbiomes that change as the embryos develop but otherwise remain remarkably stable even under conditions simulating future environmental conditions. The findings challenge decades of assumptions that lobster eggs contained only a few key bacterial species and could help scientists better understand disease risks in one of North America’s most valuable fisheries.

“We were hoping to discover one dominant microbe early on,” said study coauthor Jeffrey Shields, a professor at the Batten School & VIMS who collaborated with several of his students on the research, including lead author Sarah Koshak. “Instead, it was a mishmash, a rich community of different bacteria whose roles we don’t yet fully understand.”

The exterior surface of a late-stage lobster embryo covered by filamentous bacteria at 400x magnification.Credit: Jeffrey Shields.

A hidden ecosystem on lobster eggs

Using advanced genetic sequencing techniques, researchers analyzed microbial communities on lobster embryos and newly hatched larvae raised under varying temperatures and pH conditions designed to mimic present-day and future ocean conditions in the Gulf of Maine.

Continue reading ‘Newly discovered microbial world helps protect developing lobsters’

High-resolution temporal biogeochemical variations in a seagrass-coral cohabitate ecosystem: day-night, rain, and coral spawning

Highlights

  • Seagrass-coral habitats act as CO2 sources driven by intense nighttime respiration
  • High-resolution data enable predictive modeling of DIC, DOC, and POC dynamics
  • Metabolic cues govern DIC, while temperature and alkalinity regulate POC and DOC
  • Episodic coral spawning and rainfall trigger rapid ocean acidification
  • Short-term disturbances dramatically shift organic and inorganic nutrient loads

Abstract

Seagrass meadows and coral reefs are global hotspots for productivity, yet they are often studied in isolation despite their intense biogeochemical connectivity. Significant gaps remain in understanding how coupled inorganic and organic processes within the water column drive blue carbon services in such mixed habitats, particularly during rapid environmental disturbances. Here, we investigated a unique, intertwined ecosystem in the Dongsha Atoll, where massive Porites corals are distributed on seagrass meadows, creating a natural laboratory for studying water column carbon biogeochemistry. During a 10-day sampling period, we collected continuous hydrological and discrete biogeochemical data at two- to four-hour intervals. Our results reveal that the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) covaried with dissolved oxygen and pH in strong diurnal patterns, which were governed by photosynthesis and respiration. As an outcome, variable but mostly high pCO2 values (141–2070 μatm) indicate the seagrass meadow was a source of CO2 to the atmosphere due to strong night-time respiration. Particulate organic carbon (POC) increased with temperature but showed no diurnal pattern. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) showed a weak diurnal pattern and was linked to variations in POC and total alkalinity, highlighting the tight coupling between the organic production of the meadow and the inorganic chemistry of the calcification framework. Additionally, coral spawning led to a surge in organic content and changed inorganic nutrient levels. Rainfall events significantly acidified the ocean and enhanced submarine groundwater discharge to the seagrass-coral habitat. The distinctive contributions of this study are the extremely high temporal resolution of discrete samples, allowing the simultaneous tracking of multiple organic and inorganic pools during natural disturbances. The high-resolution data provide fundamental information for parametrizing models that explain DIC, POC, and DOC, which yield insights into organic carbon cycling in seagrass meadow-coral habitats.

Continue reading ‘High-resolution temporal biogeochemical variations in a seagrass-coral cohabitate ecosystem: day-night, rain, and coral spawning’

Mechanistic drivers of climate-induced reproductive collapse in African catfish: multi-stressor interactions under IPCC scenarios

Climate change is increasingly disrupting freshwater ecosystems in sub-Saharan Africa, posing severe threats to the reproductive success and population viability of key fish species. This study investigated the mechanistic effects of elevated temperature across a gradient and the combined impact of elevated temperature, acidification and hypoxia under a simulated future climate scenario (IPCC SSP5-8.5) on the reproductive physiology and early life stages of Clarias gariepinus in the Cross River Estuary. Single-stressor trials examined the effect of temperature (28–38°C) on oestrogen synthesis, cortisol levels and gonadosomatic index (GSI). A combined-stressor scenario (35°C, pH 6.2, dissolved oxygen 2 mg/L) was used to simulate predicted climate conditions. Each treatment was replicated across triplicate tanks, with 10 broodstock per tank, over an 8-week period. Environmental parameters were tightly controlled using aquarium heaters, aerators and pH regulators. Combined stressors markedly disrupted reproductive function. Oestrogen synthesis ceased at 34°C, coinciding with a sharp decline in GSI (r2 = 0.81, p < 0.001). Cortisol concentrations increased fourfold under concurrent heat and hypoxia. Cortisol concentrations increased fourfold under heat and hypoxia co-stress. Larval performance also declined sharply, with prey capture efficiency reduced by 33% at pH 6.0 and cumulative mortality reaching 82% by day 5 under combined-stressor conditions. Habitat suitability models projected a 71% reduction in spawning habitat availability in the estuary by 2070 under the SSP5-8.5 scenario. Genetic screening revealed a significant correlation (r2 = 0.63, p = 0.004) between heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) allele frequency and larval survival, indicating potential for adaptive resilience. These findings suggest a compounded vulnerability of C. gariepinus to climate-related stressors and highlight the potential need for targeted conservation efforts. Recommended interventions include habitat restoration, enhancement of dissolved oxygen regimes and selective breeding programmes to support thermal and hypoxic tolerance in vulnerable populations.

Continue reading ‘Mechanistic drivers of climate-induced reproductive collapse in African catfish: multi-stressor interactions under IPCC scenarios’

Understanding natural ecosystems: biogeochemical modelling

Why do we study ocean biogeochemistry?

The ocean has a huge and diverse range of ecosystems, from shallow coastal waters to the vast open sea and the deep seafloor. Each one supports life that’s adapted to its own specific environment and food webs. Ultimately, at the base of almost all marine ecosystems are tiny, microscopic organisms: the phytoplankton.

Why Does the Ocean’s Carbon Cycle Matter?

The ocean plays a dominant role in the Earth’s carbon cycle. It holds more than 90% of the planet’s carbon and absorbs around 25% of our carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions. This uptake reduces the amount of CO₂ left in the atmosphere to cause climate warming. Understanding how the ocean’s carbon cycle works is a critically important area of research.

Marine ecosystems play a significant part in the ocean’s natural carbon cycle by transporting carbon from the surface to the deep ocean. This process is known as the “biological carbon pump” (BCP). However, climate-driven changes in ocean temperature, circulation, and mixing are expected to reduce the supply of deep nutrients that fuel the BCP. This may disrupt its vital role in storing carbon.”

How Does Ocean Biogeochemistry Affect Human Communities?

Focusing more directly on human concerns, marine productivity is ultimately what provides us with resources like fisheries. Marine ecosystems support global fisheries, which collectively employ 62 million people and feed about 3.2 billion, sustaining regional economies.

In coastal areas, seaweeds provide ecosystem services like pollution remediation and have a natural value we can all appreciate. On top of that, the wider ocean carbon cycle could potentially be leveraged by marine carbon dioxide removal (mCDR) technologies. These aim to remove CO₂ from the atmosphere and eventually help reduce the extent of climate warming.

So, studying how marine ecosystems operate, and how they might change, is a major goal for our ecosystems modelling group.

What is MEDUSA?

MEDUSA (Model of Ecosystem Dynamics, nutrient Utilisation, Sequestration and Acidification) describes the surface ocean ecosystem with a simple, size-based model (nutrient-phytoplankton-zooplankton-detritus). It simulates the linked biogeochemical cycles of carbon, nitrogen, silicon, iron, and oxygen. We use MEDUSA in detailed, high-resolution simulations to help understand how human systems, including fisheries, may change in the future.

MEDUSA is typically run inside physical models of the ocean. This means its components respond to properties like temperature and salinity, and are transported around the ocean by currents. We can then compare the geographical and seasonal output from our models with observational data from ships, autonomous platforms, or satellites. This helps us work out how good a job the model is doing and how we can improve it.

Visit the MEDUSA website

How Does MEDUSA Contribute to Climate Research?

An important part of our work comes from MEDUSA serving as the marine biogeochemistry component of the UK’s state-of-the-art Earth system model, UKESM. Through UKESM, MEDUSA contributes to the international climate simulations that inform the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Assessment Reports. This helps improve our global understanding of how the ocean influences climate.

Using UKESM also allows our group to better study the links between marine ecosystems and the wider atmosphere and land systems. This integrated approach lets us examine how changes in one part of the Earth system cascade through to affect others.

Why is the Research Important for the Future?

Ocean biogeochemistry is important for understanding the ocean’s carbon cycle and its ecosystems, so crucial for both tackling global-scale challenges such as climate change and knowing how we can mitigate these or adapt to them.

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Anti-predatory responses of Mytilus coruscus to the combined effects of ocean acidification and microplastics

Highlights

  • 1.Predator cues can significantly induce byssal secretion in Mytilus coruscus.
  • 2.Ocean acidification inhibits the anti-predatory responses of Mytilus coruscus.
  • 3.Microplastics exerts sublethal effects on the byssus of Mytilus coruscus.
  • 4.The presence of predators amplifies the mild disturbances caused by ocean acidification and microplastics.
  • 5.The combined stress shows a synergistic inhibitory trend on the anti-predatory capability of Mytilus coruscus.

Abstract

Ocean acidification (OA) and microplastics (MPs) pollution are major abiotic stressors in coastal ecosystems. Byssus is the core structural trait for Mytilus coruscus to defend against predators, and it is vulnerable to environmental stress, which in turn impairs its anti-predator function. However, the anti-predator response characteristics of M. coruscus byssus and the interaction mechanisms among OA, MPs and predation pressure from Charybdis japonica remain unclear under their combined stress. The study conducted acute exposure experiments, measuring five key byssus indicators: secretion frequency, quantity, diameter, volume and tensile strength, to explore the variation characteristics of the byssus-based anti-predator function of M. coruscus under multi-stressor conditions. Results showed that predators served as a key biological signal to trigger the anti-predator responses and significantly promoted byssus secretion; OA had the most prominent inhibitory effect on byssus function; MPs exposure only induced sublethal disturbances with no significant effects on core anti-predator indicators. Furthermore, the combined stress of ocean acidification and microplastics exhibited a synergistic trend, impairing the byssus-centered anti-predatory defense capacity of M. coruscus. This study provides experimental evidence for analyzing the variation patterns of mussel byssus under multiple stressors and suggests that future marine ecological risk assessments should focus on the interactions between biotic and abiotic stressors to more accurately predict the dynamic changes of coastal ecosystems.

Continue reading ‘Anti-predatory responses of Mytilus coruscus to the combined effects of ocean acidification and microplastics’

OA-ICC bibliographic database updated

An updated version of the OA-ICC bibliographic database is available online.

The database currently contains 9,838 references and includes citations, abstracts and assigned keywords. Updates are made every month.

The database is available as a group on Zotero. Subscribe online or, for a better user experience, download the Zotero desktop application and sync with the group OA-ICC in Zotero. Please see the “User instructions” for further details.

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Leveraging AI-driven predictors of enzyme pH optima to unravel microbial adaptation to environmental pH

It is well-known that pH (potential of hydrogen) influences enzyme catalytic activity (Schomburg and Salzmann, 1991Nelson et al., 2021). The pH optimum (pHopt), at which an enzyme displays maximal catalytic activity, is therefore critical for enzyme design and applications (Zhang et al., 2025). To identify suitable enzymes for target pH environments or optimize enzymatic performance in biotechnology, enzyme engineering requires efficient characterization of kinetic properties across large numbers of amino acid sequences. However, experimental determination of pHopt for numerous sequences is time-consuming, labor-intensive, and costly. To address these limitations, computational approaches based on machine learning have been developed for rapid prediction of enzyme pHopt, supporting applications in protein engineering.

Recent advances, exemplified by EpHod (enzyme pH optimum prediction with deep learning) (Gado et al., 2025), enable prediction of the enzyme pHopt directly from protein sequences. The EpHod model leverages embeddings from the protein language model (PLM) ESM-1v and achieves a root mean squared error (RMSE) of 1.25 pH units on the held-out test data (Gado et al., 2025). To further improve predictive performance, an increasing number of AI-driven tools have been developed. For instance, (Zhang et al. 2025) introduced the model VENUS-DREAM, which employs the PLM ESM-2 and reduces the RMSE to 0.809. These AI-powered tools are revolutionizing enzyme discovery and design by enabling high-throughput prediction of pHopt.

Similarly, studies of microbial adaptation to environmental pH frequently require knowledge of enzyme pHopt. This information can be used to investigate the underlying adaptive mechanisms. However, experimental determination of pHopt for large-scale enzyme sequences remains impractical due to high costs and low throughput. Fortunately, the high-throughput predictive capacity of these AI-driven tools offers a powerful alternative for obtaining enzyme pHopt values, which can facilitate investigations into the mechanisms by which microorganisms adapt to environmental pH. The potential applications are illustrated with examples below.

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Scientists collaborate with aquaculture industry on ocean acidification resiliency

An innovative new research project led by William & Mary’s Batten School & VIMS is bringing together scientists, shellfish farmers and community planners to prepare for emerging environmental challenges related to ocean and coastal acidification (OCA) in the Chesapeake Bay.

“It isn’t something that we’re thinking about on a daily basis, but that doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t begin planning for it now,” said Marcia Berman, co-founder of Cappahosic Oyster Company. “Aquaculture is a vulnerable industry, and more science is always welcome in helping us prepare.”

Supported by a $1.2 million grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Ocean Acidification Program, the Regional Vulnerability Assessment (NOAA RVA) study combines traditional coastal and marine science with community research to develop adaptation resources and strategies for the aquaculture industry.

With an advisory committee comprised of Batten School & VIMS experts, members of the region’s shellfish industry and community planners, work is now underway to develop a dynamic, web-based dashboard featuring user-friendly tools that will support businesses and municipalities through complex decision-making processes in the decades ahead.

An invisible shellfish stressor approaches from both land and sea  

OCA is the result of both global and local processes. On a global scale, acidification occurs when the ocean absorbs excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, reducing the water’s pH and making it more acidic. In coastal regions like the Chesapeake Bay, freshwater runoff introduces nutrients to coastal waters, inducing processes that can lead to further acidification.

“It’s this hidden stressor sneaking up on us and on the shellfish,” said Rivest, an associate professor at the Batten School of Coastal & Marine Sciences & VIMS and the project’s primary investigator (PI). “Animals like oysters and clams that build their shells out of calcium carbonate provide valuable environmental services and are particularly vulnerable to acidification. Understanding the impact of [OCA] on shellfish, and on shellfish farmers, is critical if we want to support the ecosystems and communities that depend on them.”

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Divergent responses of the diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii to ocean acidification during light and dark periods

Given the limited understanding of discrepancies in responses of diatoms to ocean acidification (OA), we comparatively investigated the physiological and transcriptional performances of a diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii acclimated to OA (pHt drop of 0.35–0.41) between day and night periods. We found that OA enhanced its specific growth rate (up to 10%) in the light period by upregulating light reaction, Calvin cycle and H+ pumps to cope with the decreased pH. On the other hand, OA reduced its apparent specific growth rate (14%) in the dark period due to additive pH drop caused by OA-enhanced respiratory CO2 release. In the dark period, the cells could not effectively cope with the decreased pH since H+ pumps were downregulated. Consequently, OA did not affect cell growth during a 24 h diel cycle. These findings suggest that daytime positive and night negative effects of OA on diatoms could be responsible for differential results observed under different conditions, with implications for possible seasonal and latitudinal effects of OA.

Scientific Significance Statement

Progressive ocean acidification (OA) due to continuous dissolution of anthropogenic CO2 into seawater is known to affect diatoms that contribute to approximately 20% of the Earth’s primary production. However, impacts of OA on diatoms through a daily cycle remain poorly understood. Our data provide compelling evidence from both physiological and molecular aspects that OA enhances growth of a diatom during the light period by upregulating its photosynthetic CO2 fixation against the stress of decreased pH, but decreases its apparent specific growth rate during the night period due to the aggravated stress of pH drop from respiratory CO2 release overlaid with OA. These findings align well with transcriptional imprints, suggesting the essential role of light in modulating the effects of OA on diatoms, with implications for possible seasonal and latitudinal effects of OA given the changing lengths of daytime.

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Aragonite saturation state and coral reefs health assessment in Sri Lanka

Ocean acidification (OA) and nutrient enrichment can separately or together threaten coral reefs by reducing calcification efficiency and increasing physiological stress, ultimately weakening reef resilience. Therefore, the study evaluates the prevailing OA level over the Sri Lankan coral reef areas using the aragonite saturation state (ΩAr) and assesses the nitrate (NO3), and phosphate (PO43−) concentrations over the coral sites. The study was conducted on coral reefs on the eastern coast (EC), southern coast (SC), northern coast (NC), and west coast (WC) of Sri Lanka from April to June 2024. A total of 63 seawater samples were collected around each coastal site for analysis. The ΩAr were supersaturated (ΩAr > 1) and ranged from 2.98 ± 0.04 to 4.92 ± 0.12. Throughout the study period, the study sites had ΩAr values exceeding 2.92 ± 0.16, indicating that the nation’s corals were resilient to deterioration, and the comparative analysis demonstrates that these sites were not vulnerable to OA. However, the NC exhibited significantly (P < 0.05) the lowest ΩAr values (3.2 ± 0.64), positioning the regions near the lower bound of optimal calcification conditions. While ΩAr values indicate low OA stress during sampling, elevated NO3 concentrations (2 – 5 μmol L−1) in SC (2.19 ± 1.28 µmol L−1) and WC (3.52 ± 1.48 µmol L−1) may exacerbate coral bleaching during thermal stress events, representing a co-stressor rather than OA effect. Coral bleaching HotSpot (HS) identification emphasizes how spatially distributed HS are from January to June. The OA risk assessment confirmed that climate change will bring high risk to the coral calcification, reproduction, and damage to the breeding ground, which impact on the ecology and economy of Sri Lanka.

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Controls on boron isotope ratios in marine bivalve shells: insights from a controlled experiment across pH and temperature gradients

Documenting spatial and temporal patterns of ocean acidification and understanding the way marine organisms build carbonate skeletons is critical to assessing their potential vulnerability to present and future stressors. The boron isotopic composition (δ11Bc) of many marine carbonates provides insight into the pH at the site of calcification within biocalcifiers and, by extension, the pH of ambient seawater when the carbonate formed. The modification of seawater carbonate chemistry at the site of calcification by marine calcifiers and the utility of different taxa as paleo-pH proxy archives remains an area of active research. Despite the significance of marine bivalves to ecosystem function, high-resolution paleoclimatic studies, and the shellfish industry, their biocalcification mechanisms, controls on internal pH, and potential for reconstructing records of past seawater pH remain unclear. To address these gaps, a 20.5-week flowthrough tank experiment was conducted in which four species of commercially important bivalves from the northwest Atlantic Ocean were grown in tanks with controlled pHT (pH 7.4 to 8.0) and temperature conditions (6 to 12 °C). A total of 106 shell samples from 99 individuals of adult and juvenile Arctica islandica (ocean quahog), juvenile Mercenaria mercenaria (northern quahog or hard clam), juvenile Mya arenaria (soft-shell clam) and juvenile Placopecten magellanicus (Atlantic sea scallop) were analyzed from this controlled experiment to assess the seawater pH, temperature, and growth rate controls on shell δ11Bc.These four bivalve species, grown under identical, controlled conditions, showed differential responses to the same seawater temperature and pH, likely due to differences in how they regulate the pH of their internal fluids. Juvenile P. magellanicus and juvenile M. mercenaria demonstrated significant relationships (R≥0.60; p-value <0.006) between tank pHT and δ11Bc, suggesting potential utility as proxies for past ambient seawater pH. Conversely, the δ11Bc of juvenile A. islandica and juvenile M. arenaria did not yield a strong relationship with seawater pHT but instead yielded significant relationships with shell growth rate (linear extension), with a positive relationship for M. arenaria and a negative relationship for juvenile A. islandica. The δ11B results from the few (n=9) adult A. islandica shells measured show the most variability across the range of pH and temperatures (range of 16‰) and no significant relationship was found with seawater pH or growth rate. Despite rigorous oxidative cleaning of samples, the data suggest that adult A. islandica shells contain boron-rich organic phases resistant to traditional cleaning techniques. This suggests that the next step in the development of boron-based pH proxies in A. islandica requires additional research into robust cleaning and sampling methods of periostracum and other organics. Despite the need for further investigations to constrain growth rate effects and cleaning techniques in A. islandica and M. arenaria, there is potential for developing paleo-pH proxies from P. magellanicus and M. mercenaria to better understand spatial and temporal patterns of past, present and future ocean acidification.

Continue reading ‘Controls on boron isotope ratios in marine bivalve shells: insights from a controlled experiment across pH and temperature gradients’

Projected future of African marine ecosystems under climate change and stratospheric aerosol injection

Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) has been proposed as a potential strategy to cool the planet. The ARISE-SAI-1.5 approach, which employes a moderate emission scenario, is simulated to limit future global warming to 1.5°C by injecting aerosols into the stratosphere in the year 2035. However, the climate response to this SAI scenario, particularly along the African coast, remains unclear. In this study, we investigate the potential impacts of climate change under the SSP2-4.5 scenario and ARISE-SAI-1.5 on regional African marine ecosystems through key biological (chlorophyll), physical (salinity, temperature), and chemical (nitrate, acidification, and dissolved oxygen) parameters. Our results indicate that climate change may reduce productivity in African coastal ecosystems, with chlorophyll concentrations decreasing between 10% and 62%. Sea surface temperatures are projected to rise by 1.5°C along the entire coast by 2069, while surface salinity increases up to 0.3 g/kg, except for a slight decrease of up to 0.1 g/kg along the Congolese-Angolan coast. This salinity dipole in the Gulf of Guinea results from enhanced precipitation and river discharge, reinforced by stratification that traps freshwater at the surface. Additionally, climate change drives ocean acidification and may expand the oxygen minimum zone in the Gulf of Guinea, with oxygen levels decreasing by 10%–30% at depths of 100–200 m. Although ARISE-SAI-1.5 may help reduce surface oxygen depletion, it may not significantly mitigate subsurface oxygen loss or continued acidification. Nevertheless, it may reduce some negative climate change impacts on marine ecosystems by stabilizing chlorophyll levels, sea surface temperatures, and salinity.

Plain Language Summary

Stratospheric Aerosol Injection is being explored as a way to cool the planet and limit future global warming, for instance, to 1.5°C in the scenario we explore here (ARISE-SAI-1.5). However, its effects on the ocean, especially along the African coast, are not fully understood. This study examines key factors such as chlorophyll, water temperature, salinity, and oxygen levels to assess changes in marine ecosystems. Our findings show that climate change could reduce productivity, with chlorophyll levels dropping by 10%–62%. Sea surface temperatures are expected to rise by 1.5°C by 2069, and salinity will increase along most coastal areas. The low-oxygen zone in the Gulf of Guinea may expand, making deep waters less habitable for marine life. While the SAI we study here helps slow oxygen loss near the surface, it does not prevent deeper waters from losing oxygen or the ocean from becoming more acidic. However, it can still reduce some harmful effects of climate change by stabilizing chlorophyll levels, temperatures, and salinity.

Continue reading ‘Projected future of African marine ecosystems under climate change and stratospheric aerosol injection’

Coupled ocean warming and acidification reduce shell integrity and bioenergetics in juvenile Mytilus coruscus

Under realistic climate change scenarios, marine bivalves face compounding stressors from concurrent ocean warming and acidification. Research has established the separate effects of these factors; however, the synergy driving physiological adaptation in mollusks has yet to be fully elucidated. We assessed the physiological responses of an ecologically significant mussel, Mytilus coruscus, to 2 mo exposure under varying environmental conditions (25°C/28°C and pH 7.7/8.1). Key metrics included shell properties, flesh weight, antioxidant defenses, bioenergetics, and gene expression. Compared to control groups, experimental groups showed reductions in shell hardness and compressive strength, >10% decrease in flesh weight, and 40-52% suppression of carbonic anhydrase and Ca2+-ATPase activities. Molecular analyses of the mantle tissue demonstrated compromised mitochondrial energy transduction (>40% reduction in ATP6 expression) alongside upregulated stress response markers (>2.1-fold COX3 increase). Notably, cellular energy allocation declined, accompanied by depletion of energy reserves (proteins, lipids, carbohydrates), indicating metabolic prioritization toward stress compensation. These findings elucidate how coupled stressors disrupt homeostasis through multilevel interactions, forcing energy trade-offs between defense mechanisms and growth processes, and confirm the tissue-specific vulnerability of the mantle and individual resilience of bivalves under multifactorial climate change.

Continue reading ‘Coupled ocean warming and acidification reduce shell integrity and bioenergetics in juvenile Mytilus coruscus’

Ordovician sedimentary processes and related driving forces: Jordan, Arabian Plate

The Ordovician-Lower Silurian siliciclastics deposited on the Jordanian Platform represent a transitional sedimentary system between their granitoid Gondwana source area and the Paleo-Tethys. While fluvial fining upward cycles (FUCs) of quartz arenite dominate braid plain deltas/upper shore face environments of the Lower Ordovician, arkosic tempestite and oxygen-deficient bituminous pelite/tuffite cycles cover upper/lower shore face environments of the Sandbian and Katian. The mineral deficit (feldspar, unstable heavy minerals) relates to acid sturz-rain events during volcanic degassing (SO2, HCl, HF, NOx) sourced in an Infracambrian/Cambrian Large Igneous Province (LIP) around S Sinai/Wadi Araba Rift-Zone. The change of sedimentary architectural elements/lithofacies types during the Upper Darriwilian took place after an L-chondrite of the Main Asteroid Belt (MAB) crossed the Earth’s orbit (~470 Ma), which resulted in some small meteorite craters (i.e., Lockne). Through the Sandbian and Katian, this insignificant impact series was accompanied by massive tephra production during worldwide explosive subduction-related volcanic arc magmatism. During the Upper Ordovician High Stand-System Tract (HST), the glass-bearing tephras were transformed under marine conditions into montmorillonite (K-bentonite), contributing to green tuffitic pelite interbedded with storm-generated arkosic clastics. Transtensional tectonics (pull-apart type) caused the main Ordovician-Silurian unconformity (“paleovalleys”) in SE Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Their sedimentary fills expose arkosic FUCs originated by shallow-water turbidites during the Hirnantian. The intensive explosive volcanism generated almost continuously negative climate forcing (“cosmic winter”) by tephra, aerosols, smog, and clouding that led to regional glaciation in the S Hemisphere. The abrupt 87Sr/86Sr-ratio decrease accompanies, at the Sandbian base, the onset of magmatism, while δ13C excursions follow a Transgressive System Tract (TST) and three T-maxima indicating increasing phytoplankton growth. The undulation—0% mirrors a cyclicity of volcanic events, climate forcing, Eh, and pH conditions. The δ18O rise shows a continuous CO2 assimilation until its stop (~1200 ppm CO2) and the following formation of black-shale facies.

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