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sub-tropical Archives – Global Ocean Health http://globaloceanhealth.org/tag/sub-tropical/ Protecting seafood at the source Sun, 30 Mar 2014 04:55:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 http://globaloceanhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/cropped-wave_white_background-32x32.jpg sub-tropical Archives – Global Ocean Health http://globaloceanhealth.org/tag/sub-tropical/ 32 32 65403839 Ocean Acidification Impairs Vermetid Reef Recruitment http://globaloceanhealth.org/ocean-acidification-impairs-vermetid-reef-recruitment/ http://globaloceanhealth.org/ocean-acidification-impairs-vermetid-reef-recruitment/#respond Sat, 01 Mar 2014 03:50:12 +0000 http://globaloceanhealth.minshewnetworks.com/?p=958 Continue reading ]]> Feb 28th, 2014, Nature.com

Vermetids form reefs in sub-tropical and warm-temperate waters that protect coasts from erosion, regulate sediment transport and accumulation, serve as carbon sinks and provide habitat for other species. The gastropods that form these reefs brood encapsulated larvae; they are threatened by rapid environmental changes since their ability to disperse is very limited. We used transplant experiments along a natural CO2 gradient to assess ocean acidification effects on the reef-building gastropod Dendropoma petraeum. We found that although D. petraeum were able to reproduce and brood at elevated levels of CO2, recruitment success was adversely affected. Long-term exposure to acidified conditions predicted for the year 2100 and beyond caused shell dissolution and a significant increase in shell Mg content. Unless CO2 emissions are reduced and conservation measures taken, our results suggest these reefs are in danger of extinction within this century, with significant ecological and socioeconomic ramifications for coastal systems.

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Mediterranean vermetid reefs.

(A) A pristine vermetid reef at low tide in NW Sicily, Italy. (B) Collection of a vermetid core in the outer rim of a vermetid reef; black spots are the shell openings of Dendropoma petraeum cemented by the coralline alga Neogoniolithon brassica-florida. (C) A vermetid core transplanted in the intertidal off Vulcano Island. (D) A recruit newly settled on the coralline alga (top left) and the shell opening with the operculum of a D. petraeum adult (below). Photo credits: R.C. (A); M.M. (B,C); M.M. and M.F. (D)

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