Secondary calcification and dissolution respond differently to future ocean conditions

Climate change threatens both the accretion and erosion processes that sustain coral reefs. Secondary calcification, bioerosion, and reef dissolution are integral to the structural complexity and long-term persistence of coral reefs, yet these processes have received less research attention than reef accretion by corals. In this study, we use climate scenarios from RCP 8.5 to examine the combined effects of rising ocean acidity and sea surface temperature (SST) on both secondary calcification and dissolution rates of a natural coral rubble community using a flow-through aquarium system. We found that secondary reef calcification and dissolution responded differently to the combined effect of pCO2 and temperature. Calcification had a non-linear response to the combined effect of pCO2 and temperature: the highest calcification rate occurred slightly above ambient conditions and the lowest calcification rate was in the highest temperature-pCO2 condition. In contrast, dissolution increased linearly with temperature-pCO2 . The rubble community switched from net calcification to net dissolution at +271 µatm pCO2 and 0.75 °C above ambient conditions, suggesting that rubble reefs may shift from net calcification to net dissolution before the end of the century. Our results indicate that (i) dissolution may be more sensitive to climate change than calcification and (ii) that calcification and dissolution have different functional responses to climate stressors; this highlights the need to study the effects of climate stressors on both calcification and dissolution to predict future changes in coral reefs.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Cite this as

Silbiger, N J, Donahue, M J (2015). Dataset: Secondary calcification and dissolution respond differently to future ocean conditions. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.846682

DOI retrieved: 2015

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.846682
Author Silbiger, N J
Given Name N J
Family Name Silbiger
More Authors
Donahue, M J
Source Creation 2015
Publication Year 2015
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Silbiger-Donahue_2015
Subject Areas
Name: Chemistry

Name: Ecology

Name: Lithosphere

Related Identifiers
Title: Secondary calcification and dissolution respond differently to future ocean conditions
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-567-2015
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2015
Source: Biogeosciences
Authors: Silbiger N J , Donahue M J .

Title: seacarb: seawater carbonate chemistry with R. R package version 3.0.6
Identifier: https://cran.r-project.org/package=seacarb
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2015
Authors: Gattuso Jean-Pierre , Epitalon Jean-Marie , Lavigne Héloïse .