Seawater carbonate chemistry and the ecophysiology and ecological functioning of an offshore wind farm artificial hard substrate community

In the effort towards a decarbonised future, the local effects of a proliferating offshore wind farm (OWF) industry add to and interact with the global effects of marine climate change. This study aimed to quantify potential ecophysiological effects of ocean warming and acidification and to estimate and compare the cumulative clearance potential of suspended food items by OWF epifauna under current and future climate conditions. To this end, this study combined ecophysiological responses to ocean warming and acidification of three dominant colonising species on OWF artificial hard substrates (the blue mussel Mytilus edulis, the tube-building amphipod Jassa herdmani and the plumose anemone Metridium senile). In general, mortality, respiration rate and clearance rate increased during 3- to 6-week experimental exposures across all three species, except for M. senile, who exhibited a lower clearance rate in the warmed treatments (+3 °C) and an insensitivity to lowered pH (−0.3 pH units) in terms of survival and respiration rate. Ocean warming and acidification affected growth antagonistically, with elevated temperature being beneficial for M. edulis and lowered pH being beneficial for M. senile. The seawater volume potentially cleared from suspended food particles by this AHS colonising community increased significantly, extending the affected distance around an OWF foundation by 9.2% in a future climate scenario. By using an experimental multi-stressor approach, this study thus demonstrates how ecophysiology underpins functional responses to climate change in these environments, highlighting for the first time the integrated, cascading potential effects of OWFs and climate change on the marine ecosystem.

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Voet, H E E, Van Colen, Carl, Vanaverbeke, Jan (2022). Dataset: Seawater carbonate chemistry and the ecophysiology and ecological functioning of an offshore wind farm artificial hard substrate community. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.945450

DOI retrieved: 2022

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.945450
Author Voet, H E E
Given Name H E E
Family Name Voet
More Authors
Van Colen, Carl
Vanaverbeke, Jan
Source Creation 2022
Publication Year 2022
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Voet-etal_2022
Subject Areas
Name: BiologicalClassification

Name: Chemistry

Name: Ecology

Related Identifiers
Title: Climate change effects on the ecophysiology and ecological functioning of an offshore wind farm artificial hard substrate community
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152194
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2022
Source: Science of the Total Environment
Authors: Voet H E E , Van Colen Carl , Vanaverbeke Jan , 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: Voet H E E , Van Colen Carl , Vanaverbeke Jan , Gattuso Jean-Pierre , Epitalon Jean-Marie , Lavigne Héloïse , Orr James .