Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJessie Hines Modified over 9 years ago
1
Spring 2012 Writing 20:Ocean Acidification January 19, 2012 Lecture 2 “Physiological and Ecosystem Effects of Ocean Acidification: Potential Direct and Indirect Effects Some of this lecture obtained from http://aslo.org/lectures/11_005/11_005_rfeely_sdoney.htmlhttp://aslo.org/lectures/11_005/11_005_rfeely_sdoney.html
2
Outline Physiological processes – Different types – Acclimation and adaptation Ecosystem-level effects – Ecosystem concepts – Different types of ecosystems – Trophic cascades – Biodiversity & regime shifts Types of studies, experiments
3
Physiological Processes Calcification Photosynthesis Hypercapnia (too much CO 2 in blood) Nutrient uptake and limitation Reduced gene expression Sensory perception
8
Physiological Processes Calcification Photosynthesis Hypercapnia (too much CO 2 in blood) Nutrient uptake and limitation Reduced gene expression Sensory perception
9
Photosynthesis Two different species of algae OA could lead to shifts in algal species composition
10
Physiological Processes Calcification Photosynthesis Hypercapnia (too much CO 2 in blood) Nutrient uptake and limitation Reduced gene expression Sensory perception
12
Outline Physiological processes – Different types – Acclimation and adaptation Ecosystem-level effects – Ecosystem concepts – Different types of ecosystems – Trophic cascades – Biodiversity & regime shifts Types of studies, experiments
13
Acclimation means the ability of an organism to change its phenotype, or expressed trait so that it can survive in an environment as it changes. Adaptation means the ability of a population of organisms to change its genotype, or its genes in the DNA, over successive generations (evolution). - generation times are important - genetic diversity is important
14
Example of possible acclimation Byrne et al. 2011, Mar. Biol.
15
Outline Physiological processes – Different types – Acclimation and adaptation Ecosystem-level effects – Ecosystem concepts – Different types of ecosystems – Trophic cascades – Biodiversity & regime shifts Types of studies, experiments
16
Ecosystem Definition: A spatial explicit unit of Earth where living things and the environment interact Perturbations (like ocean acidification) can have various direct and indirect effects: – Shifts in species composition and trophic cascade (food web) effects – Temporal and spatial shifts in ecosystem functions – All of these can change the structure, energy flow, and other functions of the ecosystem => regime shift
17
Different Types of Ecosystems Likely to be Affected by OA Tropical coral reefs Pelagic ecosystems (pelagic = open water) Coastal/ benthic (benthic = bottom substrate) Deep sea High latitude
18
Outline Physiological processes – Different types – Acclimation and adaptation Ecosystem-level effects – Ecosystem concepts – Different types of ecosystems – Trophic cascades – Biodiversity & regime shifts Types of studies, experiments
22
Outline Physiological processes – Different types – Acclimation and adaptation Ecosystem-level effects – Ecosystem concepts – Different types of ecosystems – Trophic cascades – Biodiversity & regime shifts Types of studies, experiments
24
Regime shifts Kroeker et al. 2011 PNAS
26
Outline Physiological processes – Different types – Acclimation and adaptation Ecosystem-level effects – Ecosystem concepts – Different types of ecosystems – Trophic cascades – Biodiversity & regime shifts Types of studies, experiments
29
http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/co2/story/Ocean+Acidification http://www.whoi.edu/OCB-OA/FAQs/ http://oceanacidification.wordpress.com/ http://www.us-ocb.org/publications/OCB_OA_rept.pdf http://www.whoi.edu/sites/OceanAcidificationMeeting http://tos.org/oceanography/issues/issue_archive/22_4.html
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.