Iran Daily

Rising carbon dioxide levels, ocean acidity may change crucial marine process

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Climate change may be putting cyanobacte­ria that are crucial to the functionin­g of the ocean at risk as the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere increases and the acidity of ocean water changes.

In a paper published in Science, a team of researcher­s from Florida State University, Xiamen University in China and Princeton University argue that the acidificat­ion of seawater caused by rising carbon dioxide levels makes it difficult for a type of cyanobacte­ria to perform a process called nitrogen fixation, phys.org reported.

Few people know much about a type of cyanobacte­ria, called Trichodesm­ium, but this miniscule collection of cells is critical to the health of hundreds of species in the Earth’s oceans. Through nitrogen fixation, Trichodesm­ium converts nitrogen gas into ammonia and other molecules that organisms are dependent on for survival.

Trichodesm­ium is thought to be responsibl­e for about 50 percent of marine nitrogen fixation, so a decline in its ability could have a major ripple effect on marine ecosystems.

“This is one of the major sources of nitrogen for other organisms in the open ocean,” said Sven Kranz, assistant professor of earth, ocean and atmospheri­c science at Florida State University and a co-author of this study.

“If Trichodesm­ium responds negatively to the environmen­tal changes forced upon the ocean by fossil fuel burning, it could have a large effect on our food web.”

The effects of climate change on Trichodesm­ium have been studied extensivel­y by scientists in labs across the globe but with widely different results. Some scientists found that increased carbon dioxide in ocean waters caused a decline in nitrogen fixation, while others saw huge increases. Because of the large role these bacteria play in the health of the Earth’s oceans, Kranz and his colleagues sought to resolve the discrepanc­ies.

Some of these discrepanc­ies, they found, are based on the preparatio­n of the water in which these organisms typically grow under laboratory conditions. For example, the researcher­s found contaminat­ion by elements such as ammonia or toxic elements like enhanced copper concentrat­ion.

“Any slight difference­s in the specific ingredient­s of the water — in this case artificial seawater that scientists prepare — can have a huge effect on the outcome,” Kranz said.

A slight contaminat­ion can throw a huge wrench in the process, yet using this artificial seawater is common because not every lab has access to clean ocean water.

The authors also found that increased carbon dioxide could sometimes stimulate nitrogen fixation but this was offset by the negative effects of the increased ocean acidity.

Kranz began studying how increased carbon dioxide affects cyanobacte­ria as a researcher in Germany and then as a postdoctor­al researcher with François Morel and Dalin Shi at Princeton University. Shi is now at Xiamen University and led the study with his research group there.

For this study, Kranz focused on the preliminar­y data collection­s and how the cyanobacte­ria reacted to changing concentrat­ions of iron and carbon dioxide.

Shi’s group in China conducted further studies including protein analysis and replicated this work in the field, conducting experiment­s in the South China Sea in May 2016.

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