Additive impacts of ocean acidification and ambient ultraviolet radiation threaten calcifying marine primary producers

Ocean acidification (OA) represents a threat to marine organisms and ecosystems. However, OA rarely exists in isolation but occurs concomitantly with other stressors such as ultraviolet radiation (UVR), whose effects have been neglected in oceanographical observations. Here, we perform a quantitativ...

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Published inThe Science of the total environment Vol. 818; p. 151782
Main Authors Jin, Peng, Wan, Jiaofeng, Zhang, Jiale, Overmans, Sebastian, Xiao, Mengting, Ye, Mengcheng, Dai, Xiaoying, Zhao, Jingyuan, Gao, Kunshan, Xia, Jianrong
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 20.04.2022
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Summary:Ocean acidification (OA) represents a threat to marine organisms and ecosystems. However, OA rarely exists in isolation but occurs concomitantly with other stressors such as ultraviolet radiation (UVR), whose effects have been neglected in oceanographical observations. Here, we perform a quantitative meta-analysis based on 373 published experimental assessments from 26 studies to examine the combined effects of OA and UVR on marine primary producers. The results reveal predominantly additive stressor interactions (69–84% depending on the UV waveband), with synergistic and antagonistic interactions being rare but significantly different between micro- and macro-algae. In microalgae, variations in interaction type frequencies are related to cell volume, with antagonistic interactions accounting for a higher proportion in larger sized species. Despite additive interactions being most frequent, the small proportion of antagonistic interactions appears to have a stronger power, leading to neutral effects of OA in combination with UVR. High levels of UVR at near in situ conditions in combination with OA showed additive inhibition of calcification, but not when UVR was low. The results also reveal that the magnitude of responses is strongly dependent on experimental duration, with the negative effects of OA on calcification and pigmentation being buffered and amplified by increasing durations, respectively. Tropical primary producers were more vulnerable to OA or UVR alone compared to conspecifics from other climatic regions. Our analysis highlights that further multi-stressor long-term adaptation experiments with marine organisms of different cell volumes (especially microalgae) from different climatic regions are needed to fully disclose future impacts of OA and UVR. [Display omitted] •Ocean acidification (OA) acts additively with UVR on marine primary producers.•UVR and OA showed additive inhibition of calcification at near in situ conditions.•Small proportion of antagonism leads to neutral effects of OA combined with UVR.•Magnitude of responses is strongly dependent on experimental duration.
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ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151782