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    Home»Biology»Seagrass Meadows Turn Back the Clock on Ocean Acidification – Can Reduce Local Acidity by Up to 30%
    Biology

    Seagrass Meadows Turn Back the Clock on Ocean Acidification – Can Reduce Local Acidity by Up to 30%

    By University of California - DavisMarch 31, 20211 Comment5 Mins Read
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    Seagrass Tomales Bay Northern California
    Seagrass, akin to a marine forest in terms of the biodiversity found within it, spreads across Tomales Bay in northern California. Credit: Melissa Ward, UC Davis

    Expansive study shows seagrass meadows can buffer ocean acidification.

    Spanning six years and seven seagrass meadows along the California coast, a paper published today from the University of California, Davis, is the most extensive study yet of how seagrasses can buffer ocean acidification.

    The study, published today (March 31, 2021) in the journal Global Change Biology, found that these unsung ecosystems can alleviate low pH, or more acidic, conditions for extended periods of time, even at night in the absence of photosynthesis. It found the grasses can reduce local acidity by up to 30 percent.

    “This buffering temporarily brings seagrass environments back to preindustrial pH conditions, like what the ocean might have experienced around the year 1750,” said co-author Tessa Hill, a UC Davis professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and Bodega Marine Laboratory.

    Seagrass Underwater
    A divers-eye view of a seagrass meadow in Mission Bay, San Diego. Credit: Melissa Ward, UC Davis

    Marine Forests

    When picturing seagrasses, you might think of slimy grasses that touch your feet as you walk along the shoreline. But a closer look into these underwater meadows reveals an active, vibrant ecosystem full of surprises.

    Sea turtles, bat rays, leopard sharks, fishes, harbor seals, seahorses, colorful sea slugs, are just some of the creatures that visit seagrass ecosystems for the food and habitat they provide. They are nursery grounds for species like Dungeness crab and spiny lobster, and many birds visit seagrass meadows specifically to dine on what’s beneath their swaying blades of grass.

    “It’s a marine forest without trees,” said lead author Aurora M. Ricart, who conducted the study as a postdoctoral scholar at UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory and is currently at Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences in Maine. “The scale of the forest is smaller, but all of the biodiversity and life that is in that forest is comparable to what we have in terrestrial forests.”

    Aurora Ricart and Melissa Ward
    Aurora Ricart, left, and Melissa Ward stand aboard a research vessel while conducting UC Davis field work aimed at understanding seagrass’ capacity to buffer ocean acidification. Credit: Courtesy Melissa Ward, UC Davis

    Night and Day

    For the study, the scientists deployed sensors between 2014 and 2019, collecting millions of data points from seven seagrass meadows of eelgrass stretching from Northern to Southern California. These include Bodega Harbor, three locations in Tomales Bay, plus Elkhorn Slough, Newport Bay and Mission Bay.

    Buffering occurred on average 65 percent of the time across these locations, which ranged from nearly pristine reserves to working ports, marinas and urban areas.

    Despite being the same species, eelgrass behavior and patterns changed from north to south, with some sites increasing pH better than others. Time of year was also an important factor, with more buffering occurring during the springtime when grasses were highly productive.

    Seagrasses naturally absorb carbon as they photosynthesize when the sun is out, which drives this buffering ability. Yet the researchers wondered, would seagrasses just re-release this carbon when the sun went down, canceling out that day’s buffering? They tested that question and found a welcome and unique finding:

    “What is shocking to everyone that has seen this result is that we see effects of amelioration during the night as well as during the day, even when there’s no photosynthesis,” Ricart said. “We also see periods of high pH lasting longer than 24 hours and sometimes longer than weeks, which is very exciting.”

    Northern California’s Bodega Harbor and Tom’s Point within Tomales Bay stood out as being particularly good at buffering ocean acidification. Pinpointing why and under what conditions that happens across varied seascapes remains among the questions for further study.

    Climate Change, Shellfish and Ocean Acidification

    The study carries implications for aquaculture management, as well as for climate change mitigation and conservation and restoration efforts.

    Globally, ocean acidification is on the rise while seagrass ecosystems are in decline. As more carbon dioxide is emitted on the planet, about a third is absorbed by the ocean. This changes the pH balance of the water and can directly impede the shell formation of species like oysters, abalone, and crab.

    “We already knew that seagrasses are valuable for so many reasons — from climate mitigation to erosion control and wildlife habitat,” said co-author Melissa Ward, a UC Davis graduate student researcher at the time of the study and currently a postdoctoral researcher at San Diego State University. “This study shows yet another reason why their conservation is so important. We now have a piece of evidence to say the state’s directive to explore these ideas for ameliorating ocean acidification is a valuable thread to follow and merits more work.”

    Reference: “Coast‐wide evidence of low pH amelioration by seagrass ecosystems” by Aurora M. Ricart, Melissa Ward, Tessa M. Hill, Eric Sanford, Kristy J. Kroeker, Yuichiro Takeshita, Sarah Merolla, Priya Shukla, Aaron T. Ninokawa, Kristen Elsmore and Brian Gaylord, 31 March 2021, Global Change Biology.
    DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15594

    Researchers at the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory and its interdisciplinary Bodega Ocean Acidification Research Group are working with coastal communities, shellfish growers, policymakers and other scientists on a variety of research projects aimed at how changing seawater chemistry impacts ecologically and economically important coastal species in California.

    Additional coauthors on the study include Eric Sanford, Sarah Merolla, Priya Shukla, Aaron T. Ninokawa, Kristen Elsmore and Brian Gaylord of UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory; Kristy J. Kroeker of UC Santa Cruz; and Yuichiro Takeshita of Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.

    The study was funded by California Sea Grant and the California Ocean Protection Council.

    Climate Change Ecology Marine Biology Oceanography Plant Science Pollution UC Davis
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    1 Comment

    1. Clyde Spencer on April 1, 2021 6:37 am

      “… these unsung ecosystems can alleviate low pH, or more acidic, conditions for extended periods of time, …”

      On a scale of 0-14 (pH), I’d call “low” a number less than half-way, probably in the first quartile. That would actually be “acidic,” as typically defined by chemists. The water in the littoral or epipelagic zones never even decline to the half-way point (pH 7, neutral), let alone into a truly acidic state. The ocean pH (except around deep, Black Smokers) is steadfastly in the alkaline range!

      “It found the grasses can reduce local acidity by up to 30 percent.”

      It isn’t stated explicitly whether the “30 percent” applies to the pH or the hydronium ion concentration, which is 10 raised to the power of the pH. I suspect the latter, because one often sees the claim that the oceans have experienced an average increase in hydronium ion concentration of about 30% since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. However, that number thrown around needs to be viewed in context. Namely, that for ocean water to even become neutral (pH 7), there would need to be an increase in hydronium ion concentration of about 1500%. Because ocean water is strongly buffered by the (bi)carbonate system, and to a lesser extent by the borate system, that would be exceedingly unlikely. The authors have now demonstrated a biological buffering system in shallow waters as well.

      “This changes the pH balance of the water and can directly impede the shell formation of species like oysters, abalone, and crab.”

      Every calcifier has an optimal pH range for living, probably reflective of the typical conditions when they first evolved. They deal with diurnal, seasonal, and longer period changes by actually manipulating the pH at the growth surface, which requires the expenditure of energy. Just like a person expending calories shoveling snow. However, once the shell is formed, it is typically protected from dissolution by covering it with chitin and/or mucous. The major chemical stress to organisms along the shores is 1,000-year old water, up-welling from the deeps, where the combined pressure and temperature have conspired to actually push the pH close to neutrality.

      Reply
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