Seawater carbonate chemistry and maximum quantum yield and relative electron transfer rate of microalgal communities in Antarctic pack ice

Increased anthropogenic CO2 emissions are causing changes to oceanic pH and CO2 concentrations that will impact many marine organisms, including microalgae. Phytoplankton taxa have shown mixed responses to these changes with some doing well while others have been adversely affected. Here, the photosynthetic response of sea-ice algal communities from Antarctic pack ice (brine and infiltration microbial communities) to a range of CO2 concentrations (400 ppm to 11,000 ppm in brine algae experiments, 400 ppm to 20,000 ppm in the infiltration ice algae experiment) was investigated. Incubations were conducted as part of the Sea-Ice Physics and Ecosystem Experiment II (SIPEX-2) voyage, in the austral spring (September–November), 2012. In the brine incubations, maximum quantum yield (Fv/Fm) and relative electron transfer rate (rETRmax) were highest at ambient and 0.049% (experiment 1) and 0.19% (experiment 2) CO2 concentrations, although, Fv/Fm was consistently between 0.53±0.10–0.68±0.01 across all treatments in both experiments. Highest rETRmax was exhibited by brine cultures exposed to ambient CO2 concentrations (60.15). In a third experiment infiltration ice algal communities were allowed to melt into seawater modified to simulate the changed pH and CO2 concentrations of future springtime ice-edge conditions. Ambient and 0.1% CO2 treatments had the highest growth rates and Fv/Fm values but only the highest CO2 concentration produced a significantly lower rETRmax. These experiments, conducted on natural Antarctic sea-ice algal communities, indicate a strong level of tolerance to elevated CO2 concentrations and suggest that these communities might not be adversely affected by predicted changes in CO2 concentration over the next century.

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Coad, Thomas, McMinn, Andrew, Nomura, Daiki, Martin, Andrew (2016). Dataset: Seawater carbonate chemistry and maximum quantum yield and relative electron transfer rate of microalgal communities in Antarctic pack ice. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.933802

DOI retrieved: 2016

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-4.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.933802
Author Coad, Thomas
Given Name Thomas
Family Name Coad
More Authors
McMinn, Andrew
Nomura, Daiki
Martin, Andrew
Source Creation 2016
Publication Year 2016
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Coad-etal_2021_DSR
Subject Areas
Name: Chemistry

Name: Oceans

Related Identifiers
Title: Effect of elevated CO 2 concentration on microalgal communities in Antarctic pack ice
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2016.01.005
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2016
Source: Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography
Authors: Coad Thomas , McMinn Andrew , Nomura Daiki , Martin Andrew , Gattuso Jean-Pierre , Epitalon Jean-Marie , Lavigne Héloïse , Orr James .

Title: seacarb: seawater carbonate chemistry with R. R package version 3.2.16
Identifier: https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/seacarb/index.html
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2021
Authors: Coad Thomas , McMinn Andrew , Nomura Daiki , Martin Andrew , Gattuso Jean-Pierre , Epitalon Jean-Marie , Lavigne Héloïse , Orr James .