Abstract
Ocean acidification is predicted to impact ecosystems reliant on calcifying organisms, potentially reducing the socioeconomic benefits these habitats provide. Here we investigate the acclimation potential of stony corals living along a pH gradient caused by a Mediterranean CO2 vent that serves as a natural long-term experimental setting. We show that in response to reduced skeletal mineralization at lower pH, corals increase their skeletal macroporosity (features >10 μm) in order to maintain constant linear extension rate, an important criterion for reproductive output. At the nanoscale, the coral skeleton's structural features are not altered. However, higher skeletal porosity, and reduced bulk density and stiffness may contribute to reduce population density and increase damage susceptibility under low pH conditions. Based on these observations, the almost universally employed measure of coral biomineralization, the rate of linear extension, might not be a reliable metric for assessing coral health and resilience in a warming and acidifying ocean.
Global warming and ocean acidification impact coral ecosystems. Here, the authors show higher skeletal porosity and reduced bulk density at lower pH in corals living along a natural pH gradient in the Mediterranean, which may contribute to reduce population density and increase damage susceptibility.
Climate change is among the biggest threats to the health of marine ecosystems. Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide partial pressure (pCO2)1 increases ocean surface pCO2 due to CO2 diffusion across the air-water interface, leading to ocean acidification (OA)2. Since global warming and OA are coupled and are predicted to act synergistically3,4, the future health of marine ecosystems and their corresponding long-term economic impacts on human coastal populations remain uncertain5,6,7. It is therefore of great interest to understand how increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations will affect these marine habitats and the species that inhabit them.
Since the early 1800s, ocean pH has decreased from 8.2 by ca. 0.1 U8 and, if CO2 emissions continue at their current rates, the average sea surface pH is predicted to drop to 7.8 by the year 2100 (ref. 1). The Mediterranean Sea, with its closed circulation patterns and limited water exchange with the adjacent Atlantic Ocean, has already undergone a larger decrease in surface pH compared with the global average9, making it an ideal site for OA studies10,11,12,13.
Near Panarea Island, off the southwestern coast of Italy, lies a series of active volcanic vents in the seabed releasing CO2 emissions that acidify the surrounding seawater, making this location an ideal natural laboratory for OA studies. The underwater CO2 emissions generate a stable pH gradient with levels matching several Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) sea surface pH predictions associated with different atmospheric CO2 emission scenarios for the end of the century1.
The present study investigates the effects of environmental pH on skeletal structures and growth at multiple length scales in the solitary scleractinian coral Balanophyllia europaea living along the pH gradient. We studied 74 corals of similar age (mean age of 12 years) that had spent their lives at the CO2-pH gradient. Using a combination of scanning electron microscopy (SEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM), small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), micro computed tomography (μCT), nanoindentation, hydrostatic weight measurement and time-domain nuclear magnetic resonance (TD-NMR), we document the skeletal mass, bulk volume, pore volume, porosity, biomineral density, bulk density, hardness, stiffness (ratio between elastic stress and strain), biometry data, net calcification rate and linear extension rate for each coral. Weight measurements combined with TD-NMR data represent a non-destructive technique for quantifying skeletal porosity over length scales spanning from tens of nanometres to tens of micrometres14,15, whereas μCT analysis permits a detailed large-scale quantitative 3D analysis of skeletal architecture, including the interseptal regions.
We show that in response to depressed calcification at lower pH, corals increase their skeletal porosity maintaining constant linear extension rate, which is important for reaching critical size at sexual maturity. However, higher skeletal porosity and reduced bulk density and stiffness may contribute to reduced mechanical strength, increasing damage susceptibility, which could result in increased mortality in an acidic environment.
Results
Study site and seawater carbonate chemistry
The four sites around the main vent are reported in Fig. 1. Site 1 (S1) has an average total scale pH (pHTS) of 8.1, equivalent to the average surface pH of modern oceans. S2's average pHTS of 7.9 aligns with IPCC's predictions of a conservative CO2 emissions scenario (Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP6.0)), and the average pHTS of 7.7 for S3 fits the predictions of the ‘business-as-usual' CO2 emissions scenario (RCP8.5). Since no corals were found at S4 (within the vent crater, pHTS 7.4), only S1–3, which had growing coral populations and pHTS values ranging from 8.1 to 7.7, were included in the present study. Of the measured parameters at the three sites along the pH gradient (pHTS, total alkalinity, temperature and salinity), only pHTS differed significantly across sites (N=103–110; P<0.001, Kruskal–Wallis χ2-test). The changing pH was accompanied by significant shifts in carbonate–bicarbonate equilibria, with aragonite saturation (Ωarag) decreasing by >30% from S1 to S3 (Fig. 1, Supplementary Table 1, Supplementary Note 1).
Multi-scale analysis of coral skeletal properties
Combined results of SEM, μCT, AFM and TD-NMR skeletal analyses of corals growing at each study site revealed the detailed, multi-scale structural organization of the skeletons of B. europaea (Fig. 2, Supplementary Figs 1–3).
At the macroscale (relating to feature sizes >10 μm), linear extension rate (averaging ca. 1 mm per year) did not vary among sites (Supplementary Table 2), whereas net calcification rate (N=44; P<0.01, robust t-statistics test) and skeletal bulk density (N=44, P<0.001, robust t-statistics test) significantly declined (Fig. 3, Supplementary Table 3) and skeletal porosity and macroscale porosity increased (N=44; P<0.001, robust t-statistics test, Fig. 3, Supplementary Fig. 1, and Supplementary Table 3). The differences between S1 and S3 were ca. −18% for net calcification rate, ca. −7% for bulk density, ca.+21% for porosity and ca.+30% for macroscale porosity (Supplementary Table 2). The corallite interseptal volume fraction from μCT (Supplementary Fig. 4) showed a difference among sites (N=30; P<0.05, F and Kruskal–Wallis χ2-tests, Supplementary Table 4) but no significant dependence on pH (Supplementary Fig. 5). The biometric data for the corallites (Supplementary Table 5) did not vary among sites.
At the micro/macroscale, skeletal stiffness significantly declined with decreasing pH (n=122; P<0.001, robust t-statistics test, Fig. 3, Supplementary Fig. 6, Supplementary Tables 4 and 6), whereas skeletal microscale porosity did not vary among sites (Supplementary Table 2 and Supplementary Fig. 1).
At smaller length scales (at the micro and nanoscales), SEM and AFM showed that the organization of the aragonite fibre bundles (Fig. 2c,g,k) and the morphology and packing of the constituent mineral grains (Fig. 2d,h,l) appeared similar among corals from the three different sites, confirming that the basic biomineralization products were not affected by reduced pH13 (Fig. 2 and Supplementary Fig. 2). Skeletal biomineral hardness did not change among sites (Supplementary Fig. 7, Supplementary Table 4). Also, skeletal biomineral density values were similar across sites and consistent with those measured in previous studies16 (Supplementary Table 2). Similar results were obtained from both SAXS and TD-NMR analyses, which revealed that nanoscale porosity did not change significantly with changing pH (Supplementary Figs 1e and 8–10 and Supplementary Tables 2 and 4).
The principal component analysis identified three major components: growth, skeletal porosity and biomineral density (Supplementary Tables 7 and 8). Only the first two components depended significantly on pH (Supplementary Table 9).
In summary, skeletal nano and microstructural features, linear extension rate, interseptal volume fraction and corallite biometry of B. europaea did not change significantly with decreasing pH, despite a clear reduction in net calcification rates. This reduction in net calcification rate was accompanied by an increase in skeletal porosity (Fig. 3f, N=44; P<0.001, robust t-statistics test) and a consequent decrease in skeletal bulk density and stiffness.
Discussion
Results of the present study complement previous research on B. europaea at this same vent site, which revealed no changes in skeletal calcium carbonate polymorph, organic matrix content, aragonite fibre thickness and skeletal hardness in corals growing along the pH gradient13. There was, however, a significant reduction in population density along the pH gradient, decreasing by a factor of 3 with increasing proximity to the vent crater centre (that is, from S1 to S3)13.
Figure 4 summarizes these results at the ocean, population, macro, micro and nanoscales for B. europaea. At the macroscale, increasing acidity was associated with a reduction in net calcification rate and a parallel increase in skeletal porosity, coupled with a decrease in skeletal bulk density. Linear extension rate and corallite shape (biometry and interseptal volume fraction) did not depend on pH, probably as a result of the compensation of reduced net calcification rate by increased skeletal porosity. At the micro/macroscale, the declining skeletal stiffness with decreasing pH could be coupled to an increased volume fraction of pores having a size comparable to the indentation area (that is, at the border between the micro and macroscales). At the nanoscale, porosity, biomineral hardness and density were not significantly affected by pH. These results, bolstered by qualitative SEM and AFM analyses, suggest that the ‘building blocks' produced by the biomineralization process are substantially unaffected, but the increase in skeletal porosity is both a gain and a loss for the coral. In fact, in an acidic environment, where the net calcification is depressed, enhanced macroporosity keeps linear extension rate constant, potentially meeting functional reproductive needs (for example, the ability to reach critical size at sexual maturity); however, it also reduces the mechanical strength of the skeletons, increasing damage susceptibility, which could result in increased mortality and the observed population density decline13.
While the results reported here for B. europaea may not be representative of the generalized response of all coral species to OA, they are consistent with field observations made on other reef-building scleractinians. For example, while maintaining constant skeletal linear extension, decreased rates of calcification and losses in bulk skeletal density as a function of reduced aragonite saturation have been observed in Montasraea annularis17 and Porites astreoides18. While low aragonite saturation as a sole driver for the observed reduction in coral calcification has been discussed19, our conclusions regarding a balance between reduced net calcification rate and increased macroporosity to maintain constant linear extension can explain the outcomes of those studies17,18. In fact bulk density depends both on biomineral density and porosity. Our multi-scale analysis shows that all the skeletal features at the nano and microscales, including biomineral density, are unchanged. The decrease of bulk density with decreasing pH depends on the increase of macroporosity, leaving the linear extension rate constant.
Our findings, together with the well-described detrimental effects of heat stress on the scleractinian zooxanthellate coral B. europaea16,20,21,22,23, provide several independent and consistent clues regarding the sensitivity of this species to global climate change predicted for the coming decades. Together with results from previous studies24, we demonstrate that the almost universally employed measure of coral biomineralization, namely the rate of linear extension, might not be a reliable metric for assessing coral health and resilience in a warming and acidifying ocean. Indeed, although the coral's ability to maintain linear extension rate and gross skeletal morphology under conditions of decreasing oceanic pH could allow it to reach sexual maturity, it could reduce skeletal resistance to environmental challenges, affecting the long-term survivability of the species.
Methods
Study site
Off the southwestern coast of Italy, near the island of Panarea, an area delimited by the islets of Dattilo, Bottaro, Lisca Nera and Lisca Bianca (Fig. 1) is characterized by underwater volcanic CO2 vents. The main vent, a crater measuring 20 m × 14 m and ∼10-m deep, generates a persistent column of CO2 bubbles that rise from the seabed to the sea surface. In this hydrothermally stable setting with ambient temperature, CO2 emissions establish a pH gradient that extends ∼34 m from the centre of this crater to its periphery13. Three sites along this pH gradient were chosen for study. Distances (d) from the main crater centre and mean pHTS values of the three sites from which corals were collected are: S1 (the control site), d=34 m, pHTS=8.07; S2, d=13 m, pHTS=7.87; S3, d=9 m, pHTS=7.74. Water depth varies from 11.6 m within the crater to 8.8 m at the crater edge (S2) to 9.2 m at the outer margins (S1), where the local pH matches that of the surrounding seawater. The study site has stable hydrothermal–chemical properties25.
The corals
B. europaea (Fig. 1) is a solitary zooxanthellate scleractinian coral endemic to the Mediterranean Sea found at depths ranging from 0 to 50 m26. Specimens of B. europaea were randomly collected by SCUBA diving at the three study sites along the pH gradient (26 from S1, 26 from S2 and 22 from S3) between November 2010 and May 2013. This sample size was chosen to limit damage on the natural population, which significantly diminishes in the most acidic sites13, and was considered suitable for properly describing the skeletal properties, as shown in previous studies13,14. Biometric data were recorded for the specimens (that is, width-to-length, width-to-height and height-to-length ratios, Supplementary Table 5). Nanoindentation, hydrostatic weight measurement, SEM, AFM, SAXS, μCT and TD-NMR analyses were performed on a subsample of specimens from each site.
Coral sample cleaning
Coral skeletons were submerged in 1% solution of sodium hypochlorite for 3 days to dissolve polyp tissue. After washing with deionized water and drying at 50 °C for 3–4 days, each coral was examined under a binocular microscope to remove fragments of sediment, rock and encrusting organisms16.
Weight measurements
The buoyant method, usually applied for corals27,28,29, was used to measure the total volume occupied by the coral skeleton (called bulk volume, VB), the bulk density (db, ratio of the mass to VB), the biomineral density (dr, ratio of the biomineral mass to biomineral volume, excluding pore volume connected to the external surface, also called real density or micro-density) and the apparent porosity (or effective or connected porosity, PA)30 (ratio of the pore volume connected to the external surface (VA) to VB). This method is based on the Archimedean principle applied to a specimen after full saturation with the same fluid in which it is submerged (water in our case). It is worth to underline that the pore volume (VA) measured by the buoyant method is only the volume of the pores that can be saturated with water, that is, connected with the external surface. Pores inside the biomineral that are not connected to the external surface (occluded pores) are not measured. An estimate of the occluded porosity gave a negligible maximum value of ∼3% (in porosity units) (Supplementary Note 2), which was homogeneous among sites. For coherence with coral literature, for the apparent porosity we use the term porosity.
The skeletons were weighed with a precision balance to determine the dry mass (m) and then placed inside a dryer chamber and evacuated with a rotary mechanical pump down to a vacuum of 10−2 mbar. After 6 hours, water was gently introduced to fully saturate the samples. The pump was switched off, the chamber was vented to the ambient atmosphere, and the masses of the fully water-saturated samples (ms) determined. With a hydrostatic balance, the masses of saturated samples fully immersed in water (mh) were determined. The skeletal parameters were calculated (Supplementary Table 2) by means of the following operational definitions: ρw=water density, VA=(ms−m)/ρw; VB=(ms−mh)/ρw; PA=VA/VB=(ms−m)/(ms−mh); db=m/VB; dr=m/(VB−VA).
After weight measurement, the fully saturated samples were removed from the water container and rapidly placed on wet paper to remove excess water on the external surface. Each specimen was then placed in the bottom of a glass tube, which was then sealed for TD-NMR measurements.
TD-NMR method and parameter definitions
This technique (Supplementary Note 3) was applied to obtain skeletal ‘pore-size' distributions by the analysis of quasi-continuous distributions of the transverse relaxation time T2 (ref. 14) by means of the algorithm UPEN31, implemented in the UpenWin software32. Supplementary Figure 1a shows examples of T2 distributions for specimens of B. europaea. In all cases, the slope of the distribution presented a strong increase at a specific T2 value, the ‘cutoff', revealing a sharp boundary between two distinct pore classes. This point was chosen as the boundary between smaller (shorter T2) and larger (longer T2) pores. The ratio of the area under the distribution for T2 larger than the cutoff to the total area under the distribution, called ‘macroscale pore volume fraction' (Supplementary Fig. 1b), indicates the fraction as a percentage of the pore volume in the macroscale. On the basis of the comparison with mercury intrusion porosimetry data, the sizes of pores in the macroscale pore volume fraction, corresponding to the major fraction of pores, are >10–20 μm. The tail in the distribution is about 3 orders of magnitude long and should correspond to smaller pore sizes up to tens of nanometres14. The distribution with T2 <3 ms was chosen to identify the signal corresponding to water in the smallest pores or size-scale, which we refer to here as ‘nanoscale pore volume fraction'. The remaining fraction of the distribution is called ‘microscale pore volume fraction'. The nano, micro and macroscale pore volume fractions multiplied by the skeletal porosity (Supplementary Table 2) produced the TD-NMR nano, micro and macroscale porosities, respectively.
TD-NMR apparatus and data acquisition
A homebuilt relaxometre based on a 0.2 T permanent magnet operating at 8 MHz was used for acquisition of the transverse relaxation curve of the 1H nuclei of water molecules saturating the cleaned coral skeletons. The relaxometer was equipped with a coil ∼2 cm in diameter to analyse the entire coral and a Spinmaster console (Stelar, Mede, Pavia, Italy) for automatic pulse sequence transmission and data acquisition. The transverse relaxation data were acquired by using the Carr–Purcell–Meiboom–Gill sequence33 with a 200 μs echo time. Sixteen corals from S1, 16 corals from S2 and 12 corals from S3 were analysed.
SEM images
To investigate the meso and macroscale organization of the aragonite fibre bundles, SEM analyses were performed. The cleaned coral skeletons were mounted (uncoated) to conductive carbon tape and examined with a Tescan Vega3 GMU (Czech Republic) variable pressure scanning electron microscope. Three corals per site were analysed.
Evaluation of net calcification rate
The age of each coral was determined based on growth band analysis via computerized tomography22,34. The linear extension rate was obtained by dividing the length of each sample (maximum axis of the oral disc) by its age. The net calcification rate was calculated as: net calcification rate=bulk density × linear extension rate21,35 (Supplementary Table 2).
μCT analysis
To compute the corallite interseptal volume fraction (ratio of the total pore space volume inside the corallite to the total volume occupied by the corallite itself), μCT analyses were acquired and the convex hull approach was followed. μCT scans of coral skeletons were performed with a GE phoenix X-ray Nanotom S. The voxel sizes in the scans varied from 2.91 to 13.25 μm depending on the actual size of the investigated coral sample. All image processing steps in the analysis were performed with the open source software FIJI36. Supplementary Fig. 3 shows different views of the 3D volume renderings obtained from three corals of the same age from each of the three study sites. Ten corals from each site were analysed.
Nanoindentation
To analyse mechanical properties of the coral skeletons, skeletal stiffness (Young's modulus) and hardness were determined by Oliver–Pharr analysis of load-depth curves37, using a Nanoindentation Tester, model NHT-TTX by CSM Instruments, Switzerland, equipped with a Berkovich diamond tip (opening angle=142.3°). On each sample, a minimum of 10 indentation tests were carried out, in the oral region, with a minimum distance of 30 μm between two tests (the total number of tests for each site is reported in Supplementary Table 4). To avoid influence from the embedding resin, a minimum distance of 100 μm from the skeleton/resin boundaries was always maintained.
SAXS analysis
To obtain information on skeletal porosity at the nanoscale, SAXS analyses (Supplementary Note 4) were performed on three corals per site. Sections were mounted onto a laboratory SAXS apparatus with a rotating anode X-ray generator (Bruker, AXS, Karlsruhe, Germany) operating with a copper anode. Light microscopy images of the three specimens are shown in Supplementary Fig. 8 together with X-ray radiographies taken with the SAXS instrument.
AFM analysis
To study the morphology and packing of skeletal mineral grains at the nanoscale, AFM images were acquired. Samples were lightly polished using diamond paste, cleaned with milli-Q water and observed using a Veeco AFM Dimension 3100 Nanoscope III, Plainview, NY. The probe consisted of a cantilever with an integrated silicon nitride tip. Samples were imaged at room temperature and in air using tapping mode phase contrast imaging.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analyses (analysis of variance, multivariate, principal components and quantile analysis) were performed using the Statistical Package STATA 9.0 (StataCorp LP). To test the significance of the differences among sites, parametric (F) or non-parametric (Kruskal–Wallis χ2) tests were run. Non-parametric tests were performed for data that did not assume normal distributions. Multivariate regression analyses were performed to investigate the relationships between one dependent and one or several independent variables, using ordinary least squares robust to outliers. The model is described by the equation (1):
where the index i refers to the i-observation, xj is an independent variable, yi is the value of the dependent variable and ɛi is the corresponding error. The constants a, bj (j=1, M) are the best-fit parameters, to be determined by the best fit. Quantile analysis was performed to study the previous relationships for homogeneous groups of values of the dependent variable. This analysis was used to give a more comprehensive picture of the effect of the independent variable (pH) on the dependent variables of Fig. 3 and Supplementary Fig. 1, as it can show different effects of the independent variable in different ranges of the dependent variable.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Fantazzini, P. et al. Gains and losses of coral skeletal porosity changes with ocean acidification acclimation. Nat. Commun. 6:7785 doi: 10.1038/ncomms8785 (2015).
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgments
The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013)/ERC grant agreement n° 249930—CoralWarm: Corals and global warming: the Mediterranean versus the Red Sea. Bartolo Basile, Francesco Sesso and Eolo Sub diving center assisted in the field. Francesca Gizzi and Giorgia Polimeni helped during preparation and participated in field surveys. The Scientific Diving School collaborated with the underwater activities. We are grateful to Ingrid Zenke (MPI Potsdam) for help with the SAXS measurements, Michela Reggi for sample preparation, Gianni Neto and Francesco Sesso for the images in the Panarea site.
Footnotes
Author contributions S.G., G.F., P.F., L.P. and Z.D. conceived and designed the research. E.C., F.P., S.G. and B.C. collected the samples and performed the diving field work. L.B., M.M., M.D.G., E.C., F.P., P.K., J.U.H., Y.D., J-P.C., J.C.W., W.W. and G.F. performed the laboratory analyses. P.F., S.M., L.P., V.B., L.B., M.M., E.C., F.P., J.A.K., P.K., J.U.H., Y.D., J-P.C., J.C.W., W.W., P.F., G.F. and S.G. analysed the data. All authors wrote the manuscript and participated in the scientific discussion.
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