Publication | Open Access
Skeletal oxygen and carbon isotope compositions of <scp><i>A</i></scp><i>cropora</i> coral primary polyps experimentally cultured at different temperatures
13
Citations
36
References
2014
Year
EngineeringCoral EcosystemsCarbon IsotopesOxygen IsotopeCoral Reef EcologyEarth ScienceOrganic GeochemistryDifferent TemperaturesCoral ReefPaleoenvironmental ChangeCarbon Isotope CompositionsCalcification FluxPhotosynthesisIsotope AnalysisBiogeochemistrySkeletal IsotopesBiologyBiomineralizationIsotope GeochemistryStable Isotope ProbingGeochemistrySkeletal OxygenMarine Biology
Abstract We investigated temperature and growth‐rate dependency of skeletal oxygen and carbon isotopes in primary polyps of Acropora digitifera (Scleractinia: Acroporidae) by culturing them at 20, 23, 27, or 31°C. Calcification was most rapid at 27 and 31°C. We obtained a δ 18 O‐temperature relationship (−0.18‰ °C −1 ) consistent with reported ranges for Porites , indicating that juvenile Acropora polyps can be used for temperature reconstruction. A growth‐rate dependency of skeletal isotopes was detected in the experimental polyps cultured at lower water temperatures, when the skeletal growth rate of these polyps was also low. The estimated upper calcification flux limit for a kinetic isotope effect to be observed in the δ 18 O‐growth rate relationship (∼0.4–0.7 g CaCO 3 cm −2 yr −1 ) was similar to the calcification flux in Porites corresponding to a linear extension rate of 5 mm yr −1 , the maximum rate at which the kinetic isotope effect is evident. This result suggests that the calcification flux can be used as a measure of growth rate‐related isotope fractionation, that is, the kinetic isotope effect, in corals of different genera and at different growth stages.
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