Abstract

Coastal ecosystems are inherently complex and potentially adaptive as they respond to changes in nutrient loads and climate. We documented the role that carbon stable isotope (δ13C) measurements could play in understanding that adaptation with a series of three Ecostat (i.e., continuous culture) experiments. We quantified linkages among δ13C, nutrients, carbonate chemistry, primary, and secondary production in temperate estuarine waters. Experimental culture vessels (9.1 L) containing 33% whole and 67% filtered (0.2 μm) seawater were amended with dissolved inorganic nitrogen (N) and phosphorous (P) in low (3 vessels; 5 μM N, 0.3 μM P), moderate (3 vessels; 25 μM N, 1.6 μM P), and high amounts (3 vessels; 50 μM N, 3.1 μM P). The parameters necessary to calculate carbonate chemistry, chlorophyll-a concentrations, and particulate δ13C values were measured throughout the 14 day experiments. Outflow lines from the experimental vessels fed 250 ml containers seeded with juvenile blue mussels (Mytilus edulis). Mussel subsamples were harvested on days 0, 7, and 14 and their tissues were analyzed for δ13C values. We consistently observed that particulate δ13C values were positively correlated with chlorophyll-a, carbonate chemistry, and to changes in the ratio of bicarbonate to dissolved carbon dioxide ( [Formula: see text] :CO2). While the relative proportion of [Formula: see text] to CO2 increased over the 14 days, concentrations of each declined, reflecting the drawdown of carbon associated with enhanced production. Plankton δ13C values, like chlorophyll-a concentrations, increased over the course of each experiment, with the greatest increases in the moderate and high treatments. Trends in δ13C over time were also observed in the mussel tissues. Despite ecological variability and different plankton abundances the experiments consistently demonstrated how δ13C values in primary producers and consumers reflected nutrient availability, via its impact on carbonate chemistry. We applied a series of mixed-effects models to observational data from Narragansett Bay and the model that included in situ δ13C and percent organic matter was the best predictor of [ [Formula: see text]]. In temperate, plankton-dominated estuaries, δ13C values in plankton and filter feeders reflect net productivity and are a valuable tool to understand the production conditions under which the base of the food chain was formed.

Highlights

  • Carbon isotopes are a useful and underused indicator of net ecosystem production in coastal areas (e.g., Oczkowski et al, 2008, 2014) as elevated carbon isotope (δ13C) values are linked with areas and periods of high productivity

  • As carbonate chemistry is influenced by a number of factors associated with a changing climate, most notably increasing CO2 concentrations and warming waters, our results suggested that δ13C values could be a valuable tool to assess the net impact of eutrophication and climate change on coastal food webs

  • DIN concentrations of water collected on the first day of the experiment were 9.4 ± 1.0 μM for the 5 μM treatment, 31.6 ± 7.7 μM for the 25 μM treatment, and 44.4 ± 10.6 μM for the 50 μM treatment

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Summary

Introduction

Carbon isotopes are a useful and underused indicator of net ecosystem production in coastal areas (e.g., Oczkowski et al, 2008, 2014) as elevated carbon isotope (δ13C) values are linked with areas and periods of high productivity. While the contributing mechanisms are unclear, it is believed that limitation of carbon dioxide (CO2) drives the δ13C values more positive in phytoplankton This may be due to uptake of bicarbonate (HCO−3 ) which has a higher δ13C value, on the order of 10‰ (Fogel et al, 1992; Zhang et al, 1995; Oczkowski et al, 2014). There is a quantifiable negative relationship between carbon dioxide concentrations ([CO2]) and δ13C values in open ocean and upwelling areas, which was later expounded on by laboratory studies (e.g., Laws et al, 1995; Pancost et al, 1997) This relationship has been used to link atmospheric shifts in [CO2] and the δ13C values of marine organic matter from marine sediment cores that reflected hundreds of thousands of years of deposition (e.g., Jasper et al, 1994; Rau, 1994). While there is a recent history of using marine organic matter δ13C values to infer paleo-climate dynamics in the open ocean, its application to the arguably more dynamic in situ coastal and estuarine carbon-productivity relationships is less orthodox

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