Uranium
in Larval Shells As a Barometer of Molluscan
Ocean Acidification Exposure
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Abstract
As the ocean undergoes
acidification, marine organisms will become
increasingly exposed to reduced pH, yet variability in many coastal
settings complicates our ability to accurately estimate pH exposure
for those organisms that are difficult to track. Here we present shell-based
geochemical proxies that reflect pH exposure from laboratory and field
settings in larvae of the mussels <i>Mytilus californianus</i> and <i>M. galloprovincialis</i>. Laboratory-based proxies
were generated from shells precipitated at pH 7.51 to 8.04. U/Ca,
Sr/Ca, and multielemental signatures represented as principal components
varied with pH for both species. Of these, U/Ca was the best predictor
of pH and did not vary with larval size, with semidiurnal pH fluctuations,
or with oxygen concentration. Field applications of U/Ca were tested
with mussel larvae reared in situ at both known and unknown pH conditions.
Larval shells precipitated in a region of greater upwelling had higher
U/Ca, and these U/Ca values corresponded well with the laboratory-derived
U/Ca-pH proxy. Retention of the larval shell after settlement in molluscs
allows use of this geochemical proxy to assess ocean acidification
effects on marine populations