Award: OCE-1316198

Award Title: RUI: Ocean Acidification: Scope for Resilience to Ocean Acidification in Macroalgae
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: David L. Garrison

Outcomes Report

Janet Kübler and Steve Dudgeon and their students performed experiments using artificially mixed atmospheres, temperatures and nutrient additions that mimic scenarios expected to be common as the climate changes. Ocean acidification happens as more carbon dioxide (CO2) dissolves in ocean water. The focus of the work was to assess the impacts of ocean acidification on the algae that are likely to be most positively affected, under the conditions that are mostly likely to stimulate macroalgal blooms. There were three main categories thereof. First, are species that have no mechanisms to take up charged forms of CO2 from the water and may currently have their growth limited by carbon supply. Second, are species that may have energetic savings when the pH is lower and may grow faster at lower pH. Third, species that accumulate under eutrophic conditions that may grow even faster when pH is low and nutrient concentrations are high, as is expected in most coastal waters in the near future. They found that hypothesized positive effects of ocean acidification were often small, and decreased over the duration of longer experiments. Very high carbon dioxide concentrations, expected for the end of the 21st century, were actually detrimental to the growth of seaweeds. At carbon dioxide concentrations expected by the middle of the century, algal growth rates were stimulated directly. Ocean acidification affected growth rates under stress conditions but not when the algae were already growing quickly. In a sense, the added carbon dioxide acted as a supplement to rescue growth under otherwise stressful conditions. That result suggests that ocean acidification may allow macroalgal blooms to initiate and to persist longer than they would if there was not more carbon dioxide dissolved in the ocean. The sea lettuce, Ulva was found to adjust its metabolism to more efficiently take up the abundant carbon dioxide in the water under ocean acidification. Ulva from different locations differed in their responses to ocean acidification. That suggests that some local populations will expand and others will decline as the amount of carbon dioxide dissolved in the ocean increases. Nitrogen and warming had much larger effects on macroalgal growth rates than ocean acidification did. Increasing temperatures and increasing coastal nutrient concentrations are bigger challenges for macroalgal populations than is ocean acidification. But, those challenges will be occurring together as the entire atmosphere and ocean has increasing carbon dioxide concentrations. Overall, coastal conditions expected in the coming few decades, will favor the growth of macroalgae, compared to current conditions. Exactly how much, will depend on complex interactions between many environmental variables. Data from this project are being made available through the Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office, under project number 2275. The project provided training for two Masters degree graduate students, three undergraduate students and one research technician. Two of three undergraduate students are from background traditionally under-represented in the sciences. One graduate student has matriculated in a doctoral program, the other student is working in the aquarium industry. Impacts of the work beyond publications to the scientific community and student training include K-12 educational outreach in local public schools in the San Fernando Valley and communication with shellfish growers and the seaweed aquaculture industry about ocean acidification and impacts and opportunities with macroalgae in commercial settings. Last Modified: 02/13/2018 Submitted by: Steven R Dudgeon
DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Experimental results of Plocamium cartilagineum growth and biomass as a function of pCO2 and temperature (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-23Final no updates expected
Carbonate chemistry over a time-course in pH drift experiments with Plocamium growth collected at Catalina Island, 2014-2015 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-02-07Final no updates expected
Carbonate chemistry in experimental cultures of Plocamium cartilagineum cultured at different temperatures and pCO2 levels (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-02-07Final no updates expected
Plocamium culture pot pH and temperature time-series at 10 minute sampling intervals from 2014-2015 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-19Final no updates expected
Plocamium carbon and nitrogen content and stable isotope values, 2014-2015 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-26Final no updates expected
Photosynthetic pigment concentrations in Plocamium cartilagineum, trials 3-8, 2014-2015 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-19Final no updates expected
Stable isotope ratio and concentration of carbon in seawater during Plocamium culture experiments, 2014-2015 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-19Final no updates expected
Predictions of photosynthesis and carbon use for diffusive uptake under light, temperature and pCO2 using a productivity model, 2014-2015 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-21Final no updates expected
Rapid light curves of Ulva australis based on PAM fluorometry under OA and eutrophication (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-21Final no updates expected
Time-series of estimating pH in culture tanks of Ulva australis under ocean acidification (OA) and eutrophication (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-21Final no updates expected
Data on growth rates, and physiological parameters of Ulva australis under ocean acidification (OA) and eutrophication, from July 2015 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-21Final no updates expected
Summary of pCO2 and temperature treatment combinations for each culture pot and experimental trial (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-23Final no updates expected
Carbonate chemistry of Ulva lactuca culture pots testing the effects of pCO2 variability (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-22Final no updates expected
Chlorophyll a per unit biomass in Ulva lactuca under ocean acidification (OA) conditions (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-22Final no updates expected
Carbonate chemistry over a time course with Ulva in pH drift experiments (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-22Final no updates expected
Time-series at 10 minute sampling interval of pH and temperature in Ulva culture pots (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-22Final no updates expected
Stable isotope ratios and mass of carbon and nitrogen in Ulva cells under ocean acidification conditions (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-26Final no updates expected
Stable isotope ratio and concentration of carbon in seawater from Ulva OA experiments (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-26Final no updates expected
Growth rates of Ulva exposed to different average and variability of pCO2 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-26Final no updates expected
Rates of photosynthesis and respiration by Ulva exposed to different average and variability of pCO2 (Seaweed OA Resilience project)2018-03-26Final no updates expected
Measurements of fluorescence of photosystem II in Plocamium cartilagineum under various and pCO2 and temperature conditions2018-04-11Final no updates expected
Results from a study of physiological responses of Ulva lactuca to ocean acidification and nutrient enrichment2021-09-21Final no updates expected

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Principal Investigator: Janet E. Kubler (The University Corporation, Northridge)

Co-Principal Investigator: Steven R Dudgeon