Seawater carbonate chemistry and seasonal mesocosm community experiments with warming and acidification treatments in Kiel Outdoor Benthocosms

DOI

The plea for using more “realistic,” community‐level, investigations to assess the ecological impacts of global change has recently intensified. Such experiments are typically more complex, longer, more expensive, and harder to interpret than simple organism‐level benchtop experiments. Are they worth the extra effort? Using outdoor mesocosms, we investigated the effects of ocean warming (OW) and acidification (OA), their combination (OAW), and their natural fluctuations on coastal communities of the western Baltic Sea during all four seasons. These communities are dominated by the perennial and canopy‐forming macrophyte Fucus vesiculosus—an important ecosystem engineer Baltic‐wide. We, additionally, assessed the direct response of organisms to temperature and pH in benchtop experiments, and examined how well organism‐level responses can predict community‐level responses to the dominant driver, OW. OW affected the mesocosm communities substantially stronger than acidification. OW provoked structural and functional shifts in the community that differed in strength and direction among seasons. The organism‐level response to OW matched well the community‐level response of a given species only under warm and cold thermal stress, that is, in summer and winter. In other seasons, shifts in biotic interactions masked the direct OW effects. The combination of direct OW effects and OW‐driven shifts of biotic interactions is likely to jeopardize the future of the habitat‐forming macroalga F. vesiculosus in the Baltic Sea. Furthermore, we conclude that seasonal mesocosm experiments are essential for our understanding of global change impact because they take into account the important fluctuations of abiotic and biotic pressures.

In order to allow full comparability with other ocean acidification data sets, the R package seacarb (Gattuso et al, 2022) was used to compute a complete and consistent set of carbonate system variables, as described by Nisumaa et al. (2010). In this dataset the original values were archived in addition with the recalculated parameters (see related PI). The date of carbonate chemistry calculation by seacarb is 2023-06-08.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.959649
Related Identifier IsSupplementTo https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.11350
Related Identifier IsDerivedFrom https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.907357
Related Identifier IsDocumentedBy https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/seacarb/index.html
Metadata Access https://ws.pangaea.de/oai/provider?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=datacite4&identifier=oai:pangaea.de:doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.959649
Provenance
Creator Wahl, Martin ORCID logo; Werner, Franziska Julie; Buchholz, Björn; Raddatz, Stefanie; Graiff, Angelika ORCID logo; Matthiessen, Birte ORCID logo; Karsten, Ulf ORCID logo; Hiebenthal, Claas ORCID logo; Hamer, Jorin ORCID logo; Ito, Maysa ORCID logo; Gülzow, Elisa; Rilov, Gil ORCID logo; Guy-Haim, Tamar ORCID logo; Yang, Yan ORCID logo
Publisher PANGAEA
Publication Year 2023
Rights Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Dataset
Format text/tab-separated-values
Size 1200 data points
Discipline Earth System Research