Acidification EST Maug
Acidification EST Maug
Acidification EST Maug
Uninhabited Maug, one of the northernmost Marianas, is a partly submerged crater with an unusually deep lagoon teeming with sh and coral. Hydrothermal vents spewing hot, acidic water create dead zones that span just a few meters and offer a window into how corals react to acid in a natural setting. A little deeper, chemosynthetic communities overlap with photosynthetic onessone of the few places in the world where the two can be observed together.
Downloaded by American Chemical Society on August 6, 2009 Published on August 5, 2009 on http://pubs.acs.org | doi: 10.1021/es902148f
The thermal vents of Maug Island offer a rare chance to study ocean acidication in situ, which gives us a glimpse of what the future might hold.
BOB EMBLEY, NOAA PMEL, PACIFIC RING OF FIRE EXPEDITION
Five years ago, at the quadrennial International Coral Reef Symposium in Okinawa, Japan, a poll of the scientists and resource managers present ranked ocean acidication 38th out of a list of 39 possible threats facing reefs, recalls Rusty Brainard, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrations (NOAAs) Coral Reef Ecosystem Division. Last year, at the same conference in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Acidication was mentioned almost everywhere. As it happens, the perfect in vivo laboratory to study ocean acidication lies across the Pacic from Brainards ofce in Honolulu, Hawaii: its the U.S. Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands, located north of Guam and south of Japan. The Marianas offer a unique set of pristine ecosystems living side by side with hydrothermal vents both deep and shallow, spewing gaseous and even liquid CO2 and SO2. Near one vent, the pH of the water is 1. Ive been going to sea for 20 years, and these places are by far the most amazing; theyre just mind-boggling, says Bill Chadwick, research professor of volcanology at Oregon State University. Removed as they are from the rest of the world, these waters house an ecosystem that thrives around the rst liquid sulfur found on earth and a colony of mussels with paper-thin shells, exquisitely adapted to highly acidic water. You can see coral bleaching events all over the world, but you can only look at the effects of acidication at a very few places, says Brainard. Maug Island is one of the best.
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A living lab
Lab work helps researchers to understand ocean acidication, but its better to observe natural processes that do the manipulation for you, says NOAA oceanographer Richard Feely of the Pacic Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL).
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shallow reef we know of where certain spots look just like we expect a lot of reefs will look like in 50 years. Acidication events in the past, he says, brought mass extinctions, [on] the order of losing half of all genera [at the time]. Thats why its important to study these phenomena now.
A 3D view of the Maug Caldera (with 2 vertical exaggeration). The acidic water spewed by hydrothermal vents here creates dead zonessand offers researchers a chance to study in situ how corals react to acid conditions. In Maug, Brainard has taken samples where the water is 30 feet (ft) deep. We have water samples from vents coming out at 60 C, where the water is pH 6.07 and theres no life, he says. And a few meters away the water is 8.1, and youve got thriving corals. Moving between those two points is like traveling in time, he adds. In 2004, scientists found that the Maug crater extends to a depth of 820 ft, with a series of vents along the dome at 475 ft that create a localized pH of about 6 just at the limit of the photic zone. Its one of the few places on earth where both photosynthetic and chemosynthetic life coexist. Youve got sh, soft corals, gorgonians, and brittle stars living near the vents, with bacterial mats growing around them, says David Buttereld of PMEL. These bacteria have even been found in the tissues of animals such as worms, mussels, and clams that live near the vents. Sixty miles away, on the mile-deep summit of the volcano NW Eifuku, CO2 comes out in the most concentrated form ever measured and with a pH of 1. It originates from two sources: magma and the substrata that are buried when one tectonic plate is pushed under another. As a result, the CO2 is in liquid form and forms a lake. Nearby, a large bed of mussels thrives in water with a pH of 5.5. Closer examination shows the shells of these mussels are paper-thin, and they have no known predators. About 500 miles to the south, on a submarine volcano called NW Rota, which is actively erupting at a depth of 1500 ft, We were impressed to nd shrimp near SO2 vents living in water with a pH of 3-5, recalls Buttereld. At the Daikoku seamount, marine geologist Robert Embley of NOAAs Vents Program and his colleagues discovered in 2006 the rst sulfur volcanism on earth. (Before that, the closest known one was on Jupiters moon Io.) There, a sulfur lake teemed with crabs and the rst sh ever found to live at a hydrothermal vent. The Nikko seamount, just on the Japanese side of the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) border, boasts one of the worlds largest hydrothermal systems in a crater that spans up to one mile across. And unlike other such vents, its lled with crabs and other creatures. There must be millions of crabs in there, and sh and worms and mussels everywhere, all related to chemosynthetic life, says Verena Tunnicliffe of the University of Victoria (Canada). Despite these fascinating examples, Brewer cautions that not all Marianas sites are relevant to the study of ocean acidication. Many of these vents have a lot of sulfur, which adds more stress and does not simply mimic the rising fossil fuel and respiratory CO2 signal, he wrote in an e-mail. Brainard agrees, noting that the rocks (and the water) off Maug have a lot of metals that increase the pH and mitigate the effects of acidication. But still, he says, This is the only
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Downloaded by American Chemical Society on August 6, 2009 Published on August 5, 2009 on http://pubs.acs.org | doi: 10.1021/es902148f
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