The effects of elevated seawater pH and total alkalinity following dosing of sodium hydroxide in Calanus finmarchicus
Murray, C. S.; Marx, L.; Aluru, N.; Wang, Z. A.; Chen, K.; Kim, H. H.; Michel, A.; McCorkle, D. C.; Rheuban, J. E.; Subhas, A.
Show abstract
Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement (OAE) is a marine carbon dioxide removal (mCDR) strategy that involves adding alkaline substances to surface waters to enhance CO2 uptake and storage. The dispersal of alkaline materials such as sodium hydroxide (NaOH) into seawater can cause rapid increases in pH and total alkalinity (TA) that substantially exceeds natural variability in marine environments. Such fluctuations may negatively affect marine life, especially small animals like copepods who cannot avoid OAE plumes and whose physiological processes could be disrupted by large and rapid shifts in seawater pH. To address knowledge gaps regarding potential biological impacts of OAE, we studied these effects in Calanus finmarchicus, a keystone copepod species in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean. We exposed C. finmarchicus from the late juvenile copepodite stages and adult females to NaOH-dosed seawater at pH 10.5 ([~]5,000 {micro}mol kg-1 TA) and pH 9.0 ([~]3,150 {micro}mol kg-1 TA) for durations that reflect expected short-term exposure times during field OAE deployments (pH 10.5: 1, 5, 10 minutes; pH 9.0: 1, 15, 30 minutes). None of the treatment combinations resulted in mortality immediately after the initial exposure. Individuals were monitored for survival for 72 hours post-exposure (hpe), and only one treatment group (juveniles exposed to pH 10.5 for 10 minutes) showed a significant reduction in final survival; no other pH-duration combination showed increased mortality. Effects on the ability to initiate an escape response were more substantial. Adult females treated with pH 10.5 for 5 or 10 minutes showed a significant reduction in escape response immediately after exposure. In contrast, juveniles showed no immediate change in escape response following exposure to pH 10.5 or pH 9.0, although juveniles exposed to pH 10.5 for 10 minutes exhibited reduced escape response at 24 hpe. Using microrespirometry, we measured oxygen consumption following a 10-minute exposure to pH 10.5 and detected no effect on routine metabolic rate immediately post-exposure or at 12 hpe. Overall, our results suggest that C. finmarchicus is relatively tolerant to short-term exposures to very high pH and alkalinity. Future work should prioritize longer-term exposure under more moderate ocean OAE conditions.
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