Volcanic carbon dioxide vents show ecosystem effects of ocean acidification

被引:0
|
作者
Jason M. Hall-Spencer
Riccardo Rodolfo-Metalpa
Sophie Martin
Emma Ransome
Maoz Fine
Suzanne M. Turner
Sonia J. Rowley
Dario Tedesco
Maria-Cristina Buia
机构
[1] Marine Institute,Department of Environmental Sciences
[2] Marine Biology and Ecology Research Centre,undefined
[3] University of Plymouth,undefined
[4] CNRS-Université de Paris 6,undefined
[5] Faculty of Life Sciences,undefined
[6] Bar-Ilan University,undefined
[7] The Interuniversity Institute for Marine Science,undefined
[8] School of Environmental Sciences,undefined
[9] University of East Anglia,undefined
[10] 2nd University of Naples,undefined
[11] Istituto di Geologia Ambientale e Geoingegneria,undefined
[12] CNR,undefined
[13] Laboratorio di Ecologia del Benthos,undefined
[14] Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn,undefined
[15] Naples 80077,undefined
[16] Italy ,undefined
来源
Nature | 2008年 / 454卷
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摘要
A high-profile Royal Society report in 2005, followed by similar reports worldwide, high-lighted the fact that relatively little is known about the ecosystem effects of ocean acidification. Work to date has been largely limited to short-term experiments on isolated aspects of marine communities. Hall-Spencer et al. adopted an alternative approach, tracking the response to CO2 release from volcanic vent sites off the island of Ischia in the Bay of Naples, where ocean acidification has prevailed perhaps for centuries. Typical rocky shore communities rich in calcareous organisms thrive at normal pH, shifting to communities lacking scleractinian corals and low in sea urchin and algal numbers at low pH. The results show that such sites can act as natural experiments against which to test laboratory and modelled predictions of the effects of ocean acidification.
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页码:96 / 99
页数:3
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