A marine secondary producer respires and feeds more in a high CO₂ ocean
2012
Li, Wei | Gao, Kunshan
Climate change mediates marine chemical and physical environments and therefore influences marine organisms. While increasing atmospheric CO₂ level and associated ocean acidification has been predicted to stimulate marine primary productivity and may affect community structure, the processes that impact food chain and biological CO₂ pump are less documented. We hypothesized that copepods, as the secondary marine producer, may respond to future changes in seawater carbonate chemistry associated with ocean acidification due to increasing atmospheric CO₂ concentration. Here, we show that the copepod, Centropages tenuiremis, was able to perceive the chemical changes in seawater induced under elevated CO₂ concentration (>1700μatm, pH<7.60) with avoidance strategy. The copepod’s respiration increased at the elevated CO₂ (1000μatm), associated acidity (pH 7.83) and its feeding rates also increased correspondingly, except for the initial acclimating period, when it fed less. Our results imply that marine secondary producers increase their respiration and feeding rate in response to ocean acidification to balance the energy cost against increased acidity and CO₂ concentration.
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