The combined effect of pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations on the physiology of plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum and its cryptophyte prey

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

The combined effect of pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations on the physiology of plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum and its cryptophyte prey. / Yde Eriksen, Christine Schultz; Desmaret Walli, Melanie; Van de Waal, Dedmer B.; Helmsing, Nico R.; Dahl, Emma Ove; Sørensen, Helle; Hansen, Per Juel.

In: Harmful Algae, Vol. 129, 102509, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Yde Eriksen, CS, Desmaret Walli, M, Van de Waal, DB, Helmsing, NR, Dahl, EO, Sørensen, H & Hansen, PJ 2023, 'The combined effect of pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations on the physiology of plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum and its cryptophyte prey', Harmful Algae, vol. 129, 102509. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2023.102509

APA

Yde Eriksen, C. S., Desmaret Walli, M., Van de Waal, D. B., Helmsing, N. R., Dahl, E. O., Sørensen, H., & Hansen, P. J. (2023). The combined effect of pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations on the physiology of plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum and its cryptophyte prey. Harmful Algae, 129, [102509]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2023.102509

Vancouver

Yde Eriksen CS, Desmaret Walli M, Van de Waal DB, Helmsing NR, Dahl EO, Sørensen H et al. The combined effect of pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations on the physiology of plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum and its cryptophyte prey. Harmful Algae. 2023;129. 102509. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2023.102509

Author

Yde Eriksen, Christine Schultz ; Desmaret Walli, Melanie ; Van de Waal, Dedmer B. ; Helmsing, Nico R. ; Dahl, Emma Ove ; Sørensen, Helle ; Hansen, Per Juel. / The combined effect of pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations on the physiology of plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum and its cryptophyte prey. In: Harmful Algae. 2023 ; Vol. 129.

Bibtex

@article{40b434b1ab794fec9da7d7c9c0f0ee6e,
title = "The combined effect of pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations on the physiology of plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum and its cryptophyte prey",
abstract = "Ocean acidification is caused by rising atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) and involves a lowering of pH combined with increased concentrations of CO2 and dissolved in organic carbon in ocean waters. Many studies investigated the consequences of these combined changes on marine phytoplankton, yet only few attempted to separate the effects of decreased pH and increased pCO2. Moreover, studies typically target photoautotrophic phytoplankton, while little is known of plastidic protists that depend on the ingestion of plastids from their prey. Therefore, we studied the separate and interactive effects of pH and DIC levels on the plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum, which is known to form red tides in coastal waters worldwide. Also, we tested the effects on their prey, which typically are cryptophytes belonging to the Teleaulax/Plagioslemis/Geminigera species complex. These cryptophytes not only serve as food for the ciliate, but also as a supplier of chloroplasts and prey nuclei. We exposed M. rubrum and the two cryptophyte species, T. acuta, T. amphioxeia to different pH (6.8 - 8) and DIC levels (∼ 6.5 - 26 mg C L-1) and assessed their growth and photosynthetic rates, and cellular chlorophyll a and elemental contents. Our findings did not show consistent significant effects across the ranges in pH and/or DIC, except for M. rubrum, for which growth was negatively affected only by the lowest pH of 6.8 combined with lower DIC concentrations. It thus seems that M. rubrum is largely resilient to changes in pH and DIC, and its blooms may not be strongly impacted by the changes in ocean carbonate chemistry projected for the end of the 21st century.",
author = "{Yde Eriksen}, {Christine Schultz} and {Desmaret Walli}, Melanie and {Van de Waal}, {Dedmer B.} and Helmsing, {Nico R.} and Dahl, {Emma Ove} and Helle S{\o}rensen and Hansen, {Per Juel}",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.hal.2023.102509",
language = "English",
volume = "129",
journal = "Harmful Algae",
issn = "1568-9883",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The combined effect of pH and dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations on the physiology of plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum and its cryptophyte prey

AU - Yde Eriksen, Christine Schultz

AU - Desmaret Walli, Melanie

AU - Van de Waal, Dedmer B.

AU - Helmsing, Nico R.

AU - Dahl, Emma Ove

AU - Sørensen, Helle

AU - Hansen, Per Juel

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Ocean acidification is caused by rising atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) and involves a lowering of pH combined with increased concentrations of CO2 and dissolved in organic carbon in ocean waters. Many studies investigated the consequences of these combined changes on marine phytoplankton, yet only few attempted to separate the effects of decreased pH and increased pCO2. Moreover, studies typically target photoautotrophic phytoplankton, while little is known of plastidic protists that depend on the ingestion of plastids from their prey. Therefore, we studied the separate and interactive effects of pH and DIC levels on the plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum, which is known to form red tides in coastal waters worldwide. Also, we tested the effects on their prey, which typically are cryptophytes belonging to the Teleaulax/Plagioslemis/Geminigera species complex. These cryptophytes not only serve as food for the ciliate, but also as a supplier of chloroplasts and prey nuclei. We exposed M. rubrum and the two cryptophyte species, T. acuta, T. amphioxeia to different pH (6.8 - 8) and DIC levels (∼ 6.5 - 26 mg C L-1) and assessed their growth and photosynthetic rates, and cellular chlorophyll a and elemental contents. Our findings did not show consistent significant effects across the ranges in pH and/or DIC, except for M. rubrum, for which growth was negatively affected only by the lowest pH of 6.8 combined with lower DIC concentrations. It thus seems that M. rubrum is largely resilient to changes in pH and DIC, and its blooms may not be strongly impacted by the changes in ocean carbonate chemistry projected for the end of the 21st century.

AB - Ocean acidification is caused by rising atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) and involves a lowering of pH combined with increased concentrations of CO2 and dissolved in organic carbon in ocean waters. Many studies investigated the consequences of these combined changes on marine phytoplankton, yet only few attempted to separate the effects of decreased pH and increased pCO2. Moreover, studies typically target photoautotrophic phytoplankton, while little is known of plastidic protists that depend on the ingestion of plastids from their prey. Therefore, we studied the separate and interactive effects of pH and DIC levels on the plastidic ciliate Mesodinium rubrum, which is known to form red tides in coastal waters worldwide. Also, we tested the effects on their prey, which typically are cryptophytes belonging to the Teleaulax/Plagioslemis/Geminigera species complex. These cryptophytes not only serve as food for the ciliate, but also as a supplier of chloroplasts and prey nuclei. We exposed M. rubrum and the two cryptophyte species, T. acuta, T. amphioxeia to different pH (6.8 - 8) and DIC levels (∼ 6.5 - 26 mg C L-1) and assessed their growth and photosynthetic rates, and cellular chlorophyll a and elemental contents. Our findings did not show consistent significant effects across the ranges in pH and/or DIC, except for M. rubrum, for which growth was negatively affected only by the lowest pH of 6.8 combined with lower DIC concentrations. It thus seems that M. rubrum is largely resilient to changes in pH and DIC, and its blooms may not be strongly impacted by the changes in ocean carbonate chemistry projected for the end of the 21st century.

U2 - 10.1016/j.hal.2023.102509

DO - 10.1016/j.hal.2023.102509

M3 - Journal article

VL - 129

JO - Harmful Algae

JF - Harmful Algae

SN - 1568-9883

M1 - 102509

ER -

ID: 367484118