Abstract

Excavating sponges are prominent bioeroders on coral reefs that in comparison to other benthic organisms may suffer less or may even benefit from warmer, more acidic and more eutrophic waters. Here, the photosymbiotic excavating sponge Cliona orientalis from the Great Barrier Reef was subjected to a prolonged simulation of both global and local environmental change: future seawater temperature, partial pressure of carbon dioxide (as for 2100 summer conditions under “business-as-usual” emissions), and diet supplementation with particulate organics. The individual and combined effects of the three factors on the bioerosion rates, metabolic oxygen and carbon flux, biomass change and survival of the sponge were monitored over the height of summer. Diet supplementation accelerated bioerosion rates. Acidification alone did not have a strong effect on total bioerosion or survival rates, yet it co-occurred with reduced heterotrophy. Warming above 30 °C (+2.7 °C above the local maximum monthly mean) caused extensive bleaching, lower bioerosion, and prevailing mortality, overriding the other factors and suggesting a strong metabolic dependence of the sponge on its resident symbionts. The growth, bioerosion capacity and likelihood of survival of C. orientalis and similar photosymbiotic excavating sponges could be substantially reduced rather than increased on end-of-the-century reefs under “business-as-usual” emission profiles.

Highlights

  • To date approximately 30% of the anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions have been absorbed by the oceans[1]

  • Exposure of the photosymbiotic sponge Cliona orientalis to RCP8.5 summer projections for the year 2100 at Heron Island led to decreases in biomass and rates of bioerosion, autotrophy, heterotrophy and survival

  • Emissions C. orientalis and possibly other similar photosymbiotic excavating sponges are expected to suffer losses at the end of the current century comparable to those projected for scleractinian corals[22]

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Summary

Introduction

To date approximately 30% of the anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions have been absorbed by the oceans[1]. As opposed to previous experiments, the individual and combined effects of temperature, pCO2 and diet supplementation on bioerosion rates, biomass, oxygen flux, carbon flux and survivorship were studied in an orthogonal design.

Results
Conclusion
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