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Title: Recoverable impacts of ocean acidification on the tubeworm, Hydroides elegans : implication for biofouling in future coastal oceans
Authors: Meng, Y
Li, C
Li, H
Shih, K
He, C 
Yao, H 
Thiyagarajan, V
Issue Date: 2019
Source: Biofouling, 2019, v. 35, no. 8, p. 945-957
Abstract: Ocean uptake of anthropogenic CO2 causes ocean acidification (OA), which not only decreases the calcification rate, but also impairs the formation of calcareous shells or tubes in marine invertebrates such as the dominant biofouling tubeworm species, Hydroides elegans. This study examined the ability of tubeworms to resume normal tube calcification when returned to ambient pH 8.1 from a projected near-future OA level of pH 7.8. Tubeworms produced structurally impaired and mechanically weaker calcareous tubes at pH 7.8 compared to at pH 8.1, but were able to recover when the pH was restored to ambient levels. This suggests that tubeworms can physiologically recover from the impacts of OA on tube calcification, composition, density, hardness and stiffness when returned to optimal conditions. These results help understanding of the progression of biofouling communities dominated by tubeworms in future oceans with low pH induced by OA.
Keywords: Biofouling
Biomineralization
Calcification
Hydroides elegans
Ocean acidification
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Journal: Biofouling 
ISSN: 0892-7014
EISSN: 1029-2454
DOI: 10.1080/08927014.2019.1673376
Rights: © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Biofouling on 05 Nov 2019 (published online), available at http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/08927014.2019.1673376.
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