Ocean acidification hot spots: Spatiotemporal dynamics of the seawater CO2 system of eastern Pacific coral reefs

112Citations
Citations of this article
213Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Seawater CO2 system dynamics were assessed from eastern Pacific reef sites in Pacific over 5 consecutive years (2003-2008) and twice in the Galápagos Islands (2003 and 2009). The seawater CO2 system was highly variable in time and space, but was explained by physical forcing from meteorological (seasonal rainfall) and oceanographic (upwelling, tides) processes interacting with diurnal reef metabolism. Galápagos coral reef communities are naturally exposed to the highest ambient partial pressure of CO2 (PCO2) and lowest aragonite saturation (ωarag) values documented for any coral reef environment to date. During upwelling in the Galápagos, mean pCO2 and mean ωarag at five different sites ranged from 53.1 to 73.5 Pa and 2.27 to 2.86, respectively. Values of pCO2 and ωarag ranged from 21.0 to 48.7 Pa and 2.47 to 4.18, respectively, on the Saboga Reef in the seasonally upwelling Gulf of Panamá, with the highest pCO2 and lowest ωarag values occurring during upwelling. The Uva Reef, in the nonupwelling Gulf of Chiriqui of Pacific Panamá, had mean ωarag values that were always significantly greater than those at the Saboga Reef. Diurnal changes in the seawater CO2 system from reef metabolism on the Uva Reef were magnified at low tide and highly significant differences were measured over depths as shallow as 1.5 m because of the shallow thermocline that is pervasive throughout the eastern Pacific. These naturally high-CO2 reefs persist near the ωarag distributional threshold for coral reefs and are thus expected to be the first and most affected by ocean acidification. © 2010, by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Manzello, D. P. (2010). Ocean acidification hot spots: Spatiotemporal dynamics of the seawater CO2 system of eastern Pacific coral reefs. Limnology and Oceanography, 55(1), 239–248. https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.2010.55.1.0239

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free