Impacts of ocean acidification on key benthic ecosystems, communities, habitats, species and life cycles

Lead Research Organisation: University of Southampton
Department Name: Sch of Ocean and Earth Science

Abstract

The average acidity (pH) of the world's oceans has been stable for the last 25 million years. However, the oceans are now absorbing so much man made CO2 from the atmosphere that measurable changes in seawater pH and carbonate chemistry can be seen. It is predicted that this could affect the basic biological functions of many marine organisms. This in turn could have implications for the survival of populations and communities, as well as the maintenance of biodiversity and ecosystem function. In the seas around the UK, the habitats that make up the seafloor, along with the animals associated with them, play a crucial role in maintaining a healthy and productive marine ecosystem. This is important considering 40% of the world's population lives within 100 km of the coast and many of these people depend on coastal systems for food, economic prosperity and well-being. Given that coastal habitats also harbour incredibly high levels of biodiversity, any environmental change that affects these important ecosystems could have substantial environmental and economical impacts. During several recent international meetings scientific experts have concluded that new research is urgently needed. In particular we need long-term studies that determine: which organisms are likely to be tolerant to high CO2 and which are vulnerable; whether organisms will have time to adapt or acclimatise to this rapid environmental change; and how the interactions between individuals that determine ecosystem structure will be affected. This current lack of understanding is a major problem as ocean acidification is a rapidly evolving management issue and, with an insufficient knowledge base, policy makers and managers are struggling to formulate effective strategies to sustain and protect the marine environment in the face of ocean acidification. This consortium brings together 25 key researchers from 12 UK organisations to begin to provide the knowledge and understanding so desperately needed. These researchers share a unified vision to quantify, predict and communicate the impact of ocean acidification on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in coastal habitats. They will use laboratory experiments to determine the ways in which ocean acidification will change key physiological processes, organism behaviour, animal interactions, biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. The understanding gained will be used to build and run conceptual, statistical and numerical models which will predict the impact of future ocean pH scenarios on the biodiversity and function of coastal ecosystems. The consortium will also act as a focal point for UK ocean acidification research promoting communication between many different interested parties; UK and international scientists, policy makers, environmental managers, fisherman, conservationists, the media, students and the general public.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description This project identified the physiological impacts of exposure to elevated pCO2 and temperature on the physiology of key benthic taxa (urchins and bivalves) under future ocean scenarios. Our work demonstrated that, in urchins, the impacts of elevated pCO2 on immune performance in urchins, might be exacerbated during warm summer months in the future.
For other species (sea bed bivalve molluscs - the cockle) our extended experiment identified the challenge of rearing animals in mesocosms. For this species mortality in the laboratory was a problem. This emphasized the challenge of conducting laboratory studies on resilient species only - and the utility of those experiments when extrapolating to more sensitive species.
Exploitation Route Our findings were used to inform the outreach activities of the UKOA Network and the joint UKOA-BIOACID event hosted at the Royal Society in June 2015.

The findings of this project were also used as a basis for the chapter on 'Immune responses and disease,' Section 5.4 pp. 47-48. In: Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (2014). An Updated Synthesis of the Impacts of Ocean Acidification on Marine Biodiversity (Eds: S. Hennige, J.M. Roberts & P. Williamson). Montreal, Technical Series No. 75, 99 pp.'
Sectors Environment

 
Description Climate change and the costs of survival in two species of marine crabs with contrasting abilities to compensate for environmental change
Amount £272,708 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/J007951/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2012 
End 10/2015
 
Description Scaling empirically derived ocean acidification responses to naturally assembled systems
Amount £72,677 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/H017364/1 (extension of this existing grant) 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 02/2013 
End 01/2014
 
Description NERC DTP 'Spitfire' studentship 
Organisation Plymouth Marine Laboratory
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I co-supervise a PhD student (NERC-DTP funded) who is based at Plymouth Marine Laboratory. The project stems from partnerships developed during the NERC Ocean Acidification Benthic Programme. The project concerns ecological modelling from individuals to populations to ecosystems and my input is to constrain the physiological performance of individuals in a way that can be quantified as model input parameters.
Collaborator Contribution The partners (Steve Widdicombe - benthic ecologist) and Jorn Bruggeman (modeller - ecosystem and DEB modelling) lead the PhD studentship from Plymouth
Impact Talbot S.E., Bruggeman J., Hauton C., Widdicombe S. (submitted) Environmental drivers of epibenthic community structure in the Western English Channel. Marine Ecology Progress Series.
Start Year 2015