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Diatoms dominate and alter marine food-webs when CO2 rises
Harvey, B.P.; Agostini, S.; Kon, K.; Wada, S.; Hall-Spencer, J.M. (2019). Diatoms dominate and alter marine food-webs when CO2 rises. Diversity 11(12): 242. https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d11120242
In: Diversity. MDPI: Basel. ISSN 1424-2818; e-ISSN 1424-2818
Peer reviewed article  

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Trefwoord
    Marien/Kust
Author keywords
    ocean acidification; benthic diatoms; ecological shift; CO2 fertilisation; turf algae; habitat-forming; algal blooms; marine food-webs

Auteurs  Top 
  • Harvey, B.P.
  • Agostini, S.
  • Kon, K.
  • Wada, S.
  • Hall-Spencer, J.M.

Abstract
    Diatoms are so important in ocean food-webs that any human induced changes in their abundance could have major effects on the ecology of our seas. The large chain-forming diatom Biddulphia biddulphiana greatly increases in abundance as pCO2 increases along natural seawater CO2 gradients in the north Pacific Ocean. In areas with reference levels of pCO2, it was hard to find, but as seawater carbon dioxide levels rose, it replaced seaweeds and became the main habitat-forming species on the seabed. This diatom algal turf supported a marine invertebrate community that was much less diverse and completely differed from the benthic communities found at present-day levels of pCO2. Seawater CO2 enrichment stimulated the growth and photosynthetic efficiency of benthic diatoms, but reduced the abundance of calcified grazers such as gastropods and sea urchins. These observations suggest that ocean acidification will shift photic zone community composition so that coastal food-web structure and ecosystem function are homogenised, simplified, and more strongly affected by seasonal algal blooms.

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