Project: Changing Phytoplankton Trace Metal Requirements in a High CO2 Ocean

Acronym/Short Name:PhytoTM_in_HighCO2
Project Duration:2009-08 -2012-07
Geolocation:Laboratory

Description

This award is funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Public Law 111-5). The award is also associated with the NSF Integrative Computing Education and Research (ICER) initiative.

Over the past two decades, the fundamental importance of iron and other bioactive trace metals in structuring marine food webs and biogeochemical cycles has been realized. Even more recently, over the past several years, the international ocean science community has begun to mobilize in an urgent effort to understand the ecosystem-level consequences of rising anthropogenic CO2 and acidification of the global ocean. This project examines the intersection of these two major research themes, by asking the question: How will the trace element requirements of marine phytoplankton change in response to future increases in atmospheric pCO2?

Preliminary data generated by the investigators suggests that changing pCO2 can indeed profoundly affect the cellular quotas of Fe, Mo, Zn, Cd, Co and Mn in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic phytoplankton. Trace metals play critical roles as enzymatic co-factors for processes that are closely linked to the availability of CO2 such as carbon and nitrogen fixation, photosynthetic electron transport, and nutrient acquisition. Therefore, it is important to develop methods to quantitatively predict how algal metal requirements will change in tomorrow's rapidly changing ocean.

The investigators will take a three-pronged approach to addressing this overarching question:
(1) Laboratory experiments will measure the trace metal quotas of steady-state cultures of key phytoplankton functional groups like diatoms, coccolithophores, Phaeocystis, and diazotrophic and pico-cyanobacteria while varying pCO2 both alone, and together with other limiting factors such as iron, temperature, and light.
(2) Field work in the Southern California bight will provide measurements in trace metal stoichiometry of natural phytoplankton communities over a seasonal cycle in relation to pCO2 and other environmental variables -- this region is already experiencing some of the largest increases in acidic upwelled water along the entire West Coast.
(3) This observational and correlative study will be coupled with manipulative experiments at the USC Catalina Island facility in which trace metal quotas of the same natural phytoplankton communities can be measured in relation to pCO2 shifts under controlled incubation conditions.

Together, these three complementary approaches will enable the investigators to determine over a variety of temporal and spatial scales how phytoplankton-driven trace element biogeochemistry is likely to change in a future high-CO2 ocean.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Experimental results from a study of Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries growth rates and cellular domoic acid under varying pCO2 and phosphate levels (PhytoTM_in_HighCO2 project)2012-11-15Final no updates expected
Experimental results from a study of pPeudo-nitzschia multiseries domoic acid production, C-fixation, mean growth, and element composition under varying pCO2 and phosphate levels (PhytoTM_in_HighCO2 project)2012-11-15Final no updates expected
Experimental results from a study of CO2 and N2 fixation and trichome length of Trichodesmium erythraeum under varying pCO2 and light conditions (PhytoTM_in_HighCO2 project)2012-11-14Final no updates expected
Experimental results from a study of growth rates of two strains of Trichodesmium erythraeum under varying pCO2 and light conditions (PhytoTM_in_HighCO2 project)2012-11-14Final no updates expected
Experimental results from a study of cellular quotas of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus in Trichodesmium erythraeum strain IMS101 under varying pCO2 and light conditions (PhytoTM_in_HighCO2 project)2012-11-14Final no updates expected
Experimental results from a study of photosynthesis rates of the diatom Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries under varying pCO2, phosphate, and light levels (PhytoTM_in_HighCO2 project)2012-11-05Final no updates expected
Results from experiments on Attheya sp. growth, productivity, and trace metal use under varying pCO2 and B12 levels (PhytoTM_in_HighCO2 project)2012-11-02Final no updates expected
Results from experiments on Pseudo-nitzschia fraudulenta growth and domic acid productionunder varying CO2 and silicate levels (PhytoTM_in_HighCO2 project)2012-11-02Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: Feixue Fu
University of Southern California (USC)

Co-Principal Investigator: David A. Hutchins
University of Southern California (USC)

Co-Principal Investigator: Sergio A. Sanudo-Wilhelmy
University of Southern California (USC)