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Carbonate chemistry fitness landscapes inform diatom resilience to future perturbations

Version 3 2025-10-14, 01:04
Version 2 2025-09-26, 00:33
Version 1 2025-09-25, 02:57
journal contribution
posted on 2025-09-26, 00:33 authored by Aaron FerdererAaron Ferderer, Kai G Schulz, Anusuya Willis, Kirralee G Baker, Zanna Chase, Lennart T Bach
Marine diatoms are an abundant and ecologically important phytoplankton group susceptible to changing environmental conditions. Currently available data assessing diatom responses focus on empirical comparisons between present-day and future conditions, rather than exploring the mechanisms driving these responses. Here, we conducted high-resolution growth experiments to map the fitness of diatoms across broad carbonate chemistry landscapes. Our results reveal species-specific carbonate chemistry niches, which can be used to predict ecological shifts between species under changing conditions driven by ocean acidification or ocean alkalinity enhancement. The results demonstrate that changes in diatom fitness are almost exclusively driven by carbon dioxide and proton concentrations, with bicarbonate exerting no discernible effect. Thus, current assumptions regarding the role of bicarbonate as a primary carbon source supporting diatom growth may be overestimated. This study presents a methodological and conceptual framework as a foundation for future studies to collate data capable of predicting species-specific responses and shifts in ecological niches driven by changes in marine carbonate chemistry.

Funding

PhD top up: Influence of Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement on Phytoplankton Species Composition Description : CSIRO-Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation

History

Sub-type

  • Article

Publication title

Sci Adv

Medium

Print-Electronic

Volume

11

Issue

38

Article number

eadu8024

Pagination

eadu8024

eISSN

2375-2548

ISSN

2375-2548

Department/School

Ecology and Biodiversity, Oceans Ice and Climate

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

United States

Event Venue

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Ecology & Biodiversity, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia.

Rights statement

Copyright © 2025 the Authors, some rights reserved. Exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S.Government Works. Distributed under a creative commons Attribution license 4.0 (CC BY).

UN Sustainable Development Goals

14 Life Below Water

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