1. Ecophysiological response of Jania rubens(Corallinaceae) to ocean acidification
- Author
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Porzio, Lucia, Buia, Maria, Lorenti, Maurizio, Vitale, Ermenegilda, Amitrano, Chiara, and Arena, Carmen
- Abstract
Coralline algae (Rhodophyta) play a key role in promoting settlement of other benthic organisms, being the food source for herbivores, being involved in the stabilization of reef networks, and in carbonate production. They are considered a vulnerable group to ocean acidification due to the potential dissolution of their high-Mg calcite skeleton at lower pH. Nevertheless, different species of coralline algae showed different responses to low-pH/high-pCO2environment. Here, we studied the physiological response of Jania rubensto the pH condition predicted for the year 2100. We used a natural CO2vent system as natural laboratory to transplant J. rubensfrom pH 8.1–7.5 for 3 weeks. Maximal PSII photochemical efficiency showed a significant reduction in transplanted thalli at low pH (7.5-T) compared to other conditions; consistent with that result, also the pigments involved in the light-harvesting spectrum of J. rubens(i.e., chlorophylls, carotenoids, and phycobilins), exhibited a significant decrease under water acidification, highlighting the strong sensitivity of this species to the environmental change. A major understanding of the response of coralline algae at high CO2will go through the impact of OA on benthic ecosystems in the next future. This contribution is the written, peer-reviewed version of a paper presented at the Conference “Changes and Crises in the Mediterranean Sea” held at Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei in Rome on October 17, 2017.
- Published
- 2018
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