Abstract

Abstract. Predicting consequences of ocean deoxygenation and ocean acidification for nearshore marine ecosystems requires baseline dissolved oxygen (DO) and carbonate chemistry data that are both high-frequency and high-quality. Such data allow accurate assessment of environmental variability and present-day organism exposure regimes. In this study, scales of DO and pH variability were characterized over one year in a nearshore kelp forest ecosystem in the Southern California Bight. DO and pH were strongly, positively correlated, revealing that organisms on this upwelling shelf are not only exposed to low pH but also to low DO. The dominant scale of temporal DO and pH variability occurred on semidiurnal, diurnal and event (days–weeks) time scales. Daily ranges in DO and pH at 7 m water depth (13 mab) could be as large as 220 μmol kg−1 and 0.36 units, respectively. Sources of pH and DO variation include photosynthesis within the kelp forest ecosystem, which can elevate DO and pH by up to 60 μmol kg−1 and 0.1 units over one week following the intrusion of high-density, nutrient-rich water. Accordingly, highly productive macrophyte-based ecosystems could serve as deoxygenation and acidification refugia by acting to elevate DO and pH relative to surrounding waters. DO and pH exhibited greater spatial variation over a 10 m increase in water depth (from 7 to 17 m) than along a 5 km stretch of shelf in a cross-shore or alongshore direction. Over a three-month time period, mean DO and pH at 17 m water depth were 168 μmol kg−1 and 7.87, respectively. These values represent a 35% decrease in mean DO and 37% increase in [H+] relative to near-surface waters. High-frequency variation was also reduced at depth. The mean daily range in DO and pH was 39% and 37% less, respectively, at 17 m water depth relative to 7 m. As a consequence, the exposure history of an organism is largely a function of its depth of occurrence within the kelp forest. With knowledge of local alkalinity conditions and high-frequency temperature, salinity, and pH data, we estimated pCO2 and calcium carbonate saturation states with respect to calcite and aragonite (Ωcalc and Ωarag) for the La Jolla kelp forest at 7 m and 17 m water depth. pCO2 ranged from 246 to 1016 μatm, Ωcalc was always supersaturated, and Ωarag was undersaturated at the beginning of March for five days when pH was less than 7.75 and DO was less than 115 μmol kg−1. These findings raise the possibility that the benthic communities along eastern boundary current systems are currently acclimatized and adapted to natural, variable, and low DO and pH. Still, future exposure of coastal California populations to even lower DO and pH may increase as upwelling intensifies and hypoxic boundaries shoal, compressing habitats and challenging the physiological capacity of intolerant species.

Highlights

  • Increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) have reduced subsurface oxygen concentrations and increased acidity of surface waters (Gruber, 2011; Doney et al, 2012)

  • A decrease in correlation at the diurnal bandwidth indicates that diurnal isothermal fluctuations either play less of a role in diurnal forcing of dissolved oxygen (DO) and pH, or other mechanisms are opposing diurnal modulations in DO and pH forced by temperature

  • We show that DO and pH in an eastern Pacific kelp forest can be highly variable, tightly correlated, and reflect influences from many different processes including alongshore-current direction, internal tidal dynamics, and biological production

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Summary

Introduction

Increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) have reduced subsurface oxygen concentrations and increased acidity of surface waters (Gruber, 2011; Doney et al, 2012). Much of what has been learned about carbonate chemistry and dissolved oxygen (DO) trends and trajectories in the ocean is based upon open-ocean conditions measured via ship-based hydrographic time series that sample quarterly, annually or even less often. This limits our understanding of DO and carbonate chemistry dynamics in nearshore settings. There are contemporary nearshore environments, eastern boundary current systems, which are exposed to low pH, high pCO2, and low conditions during upwelling events (Feely et al, 2008; Hofmann et al, 2011b). Understanding the nature and drivers of DO and carbonate chemistry dynamics along eastern boundary current systems, which harbor ecologically and economically important species, will provide insight into the relative sensitivity of these systems to a changing ocean climate

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