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Carbonate mineralogy of a tropical bryozoan biota and its vulnerability to ocean acidification
Authors:Paul D. Taylor  Aileen Tan Shau-Hwai  Anatoliy B. Kudryavstev  J. William Schopf
Affiliation:1. Department of Earth Sciences, Natural History Museum, London, UK;2. Marine Science Laboratory, School of Biological Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, Malaysia;3. Center for the Study of Evolution and the Origin of Life, University of California, Los Angeles, USA;4. University of Wisconsin Astrobiology Research Consortium, Department of Geosciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA;5. Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, USA;6. Molecular Biology Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Abstract:Decreasing pH levels in the world’s oceans are widely recognized as a threat to marine life. Bryozoans are among several phyla that produce calcium carbonate skeletons potentially affected by ocean acidification (OA). Depending on species, bryozoan skeletons can consist of calcite, aragonite or have a bimineralic combination of these two minerals. Aragonite is generally more soluble in seawater than calcite, making aragonitic species more vulnerable to OA. Here, for the first time we use Raman spectroscopy to determine the mineral composition of a tropical bryozoan biota. Compared with bryozoan biotas from higher latitudes in which calcite predominates, aragonite was found to occur in a much higher proportion of the 22 cheilostome bryozoan species collected from the shorelines of Penang and Langkawi in Malaysia, where 46% of species are calcitic, 41% aragonitic and 13% bimineralic. All but one of the aragonitic or bimineralic species belong to the ascophorans, whereas calcitic skeletons characterized most of the anascans, many of which are primitive ‘weedy’ malacostegines. These results suggest a relatively high vulnerability of tropical bryozoan faunas to OA, with the weedier taxa likely to be least impacted.
Keywords:Tom Fenchel
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