High-CO2 Levels Rather than Acidification Restrict Emiliania huxleyi Growth and Performance
570
0303 health sciences
Photochemistry
Calcificación
Haptophyta
Ocean acidifcation
Emiliania huxleyi
Carbon Dioxide
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Stress
03 medical and health sciences
Calcifcation
13. Climate action
Phytoplankton
Coccolithophores
Seawater
pCO2
14. Life underwater
Photosynthesis
Microbiology of Aquatic Systems
DOI:
10.1007/s00248-022-02035-3
Publication Date:
2022-05-27T22:02:32Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
AbstractThe coccolithophoreEmiliania huxleyishows a variety of responses to ocean acidification (OA) and to high-CO2concentrations, but there is still controversy on differentiating between these two factors when using different strains and culture methods. A heavily calcified type A strain isolated from the Norwegian Sea was selected and batch cultured in order to understand whether acclimation to OA was mediated mainly by CO2or H+, and how it impacted cell growth performance, calcification, and physiological stress management.Emiliania huxleyiresponded differently to each acidification method. CO2-enriched aeration (1200 µatm, pH 7.62) induced a negative effect on the cells when compared to acidification caused by decreasing pH alone (pH 7.60). The growth rates of the coccolithophore were more negatively affected by high pCO2than by low pH without CO2enrichment with respect to the control (400 µatm, pH 8.1). High CO2also affected cell viability and promoted the accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which was not observed under low pH. This suggests a possible metabolic imbalance induced by high CO2alone. In contrast, the affinity for carbon uptake was negatively affected by both low pH and high CO2. Photochemistry was only marginally affected by either acidification method when analysed by PAM fluorometry. The POC and PIC cellular quotas and the PIC:POC ratio shifted along the different phases of the cultures; consequently, calcification did not follow the same pattern observed in cell stress and growth performance. Specifically, acidification by HCl addition caused a higher proportion of severely deformed coccoliths, than CO2enrichment. These results highlight the capacity of CO2rather than acidification itself to generate metabolic stress, not reducing calcification.
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