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Coccolithophore Growth and Calcification in an Acidified Ocean: Insights From Community Earth System Model Simulations
Author(s) -
Krumhardt K. M.,
Lovenduski N. S.,
Long M. C.,
Levy M.,
Lindsay K.,
Moore J. K.,
Nissen C.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of advances in modeling earth systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.03
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 1942-2466
DOI - 10.1029/2018ms001483
Subject(s) - coccolithophore , phytoplankton , oceanography , emiliania huxleyi , calcification , environmental science , ocean acidification , global change , geology , climatology , ecology , seawater , climate change , biology , nutrient , medicine , pathology
Anthropogenic CO 2 emissions are inundating the upper ocean, acidifying the water, and altering the habitat for marine phytoplankton. These changes are thought to be particularly influential for calcifying phytoplankton, namely, coccolithophores. Coccolithophores are widespread and account for a substantial portion of open ocean calcification; changes in their abundance, distribution, or level of calcification could have far‐reaching ecological and biogeochemical impacts. Here, we isolate the effects of increasing CO 2 on coccolithophores using an explicit coccolithophore phytoplankton functional type parameterization in the Community Earth System Model. Coccolithophore growth and calcification are sensitive to changing aqueous CO 2 . While holding circulation constant, we demonstrate that increasing CO 2 concentrations cause coccolithophores in most areas to decrease calcium carbonate production relative to growth. However, several oceanic regions show large increases in calcification, such the North Atlantic, Western Pacific, and parts of the Southern Ocean, due to an alleviation of carbon limitation for coccolithophore growth. Global annual calcification is 6% higher under present‐day CO 2 levels relative to preindustrial CO 2 (1.5 compared to 1.4 Pg C/year). However, under 900 μatm CO 2 , global annual calcification is 11% lower than under preindustrial CO 2 levels (1.2 Pg C/year). Large portions of the ocean show greatly decreased coccolithophore calcification relative to growth, resulting in significant regional carbon export and air‐sea CO 2 exchange feedbacks. Our study implies that coccolithophores become more abundant but less calcified as CO 2 increases with a tipping point in global calcification (changing from increasing to decreasing calcification relative to preindustrial) at approximately ∼600 μatm CO 2 .

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