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OPINION article

Front. Mar. Sci., 01 November 2021
Sec. Marine Biogeochemistry

Overstated Potential for Seagrass Meadows to Mitigate Coastal Ocean Acidification

Updated
  • 1Institute of Carbon Cycles, Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon, Geesthacht, Germany
  • 2Department of Biological Sciences, Institute of Environment, Florida International University, Miami, FL, United States
  • 3Geochemistry and Isotope Biogeochemistry Group, Department of Marine Geology, Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research, Warnemnde, Germany
  • 4Center for Marine Sensors, Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment, Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg, Wilhelmshaven, Germany
  • 5Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, and Ecosystem Science, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States

Ricart et al. (2021, R21) explored the potential for seagrass meadows to act as a buffer of coastal ocean acidification (OA). This work relied largely on sensor-based pH measurements during 29 separate instrument deployments along the California coast, arguing that (1) seagrass aerobic metabolism consistently enhances local pH, and that (2) this OA-amelioration can persist for lengths of up to 21 days. While pH was often greater in seagrass meadows than in adjacent unvegetated regions, we are concerned with the extent to which this is attributed to seagrass ecosystem metabolism, and the interpretation that this OA-amelioration is sustained over daily and tidal timescales. By incompletely considering alternative explanations for elevated pH, irrespective of seagrass productivity, R21 offers insufficient support of OA-mitigation as a reliable ecosystem service of seagrasses. We therefore see the authors' claim that seagrass ecosystems could be “leveraged as local management tools to mitigate the consequences of OA” as worthy of critical inspection.

First, there is a fundamental issue in R21 with the mathematical treatment of ΔpH (ΔpH = pHseagrass – pHnonvegetated), stemming from the fact that pH is on a logarithmic scale. To illustrate this issue, it is a simple fact that a ΔpH of 0.1 involves a change in [H+] that is 10 times larger when starting at pH = 7 than at pH=8. This effect is made abundantly clear by the linear relationship between pH and ΔpH (Figure 1A) present in the R21 dataset. As expected, pH also varies with salinity, with slopes that vary across sites (Figure 1B) and seasons (Figure 5 in R21). Such comparisons of ΔpH across sites, seasons, etc., are mathematically inappropriate, when made without also considering Δ[H+] (Fassbender et al., 2021). We therefore find the interpretation of ΔpH in R21 to be misleading because it does not consider the impact of initial pH on the size of ΔpH.

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. Linear correlation (p < 0.001) between pH and ΔpH (A). Relationship between salinity and [H+], separated by region and site (B). Points in (B) are colored by site, while the shape identifies between “Seagrass” (SG) and “Non-vegetated” (NV) areas. Counts of positive and negative Δ[H+] hourly averages, separated by region and by the threshold criteria described in the legend (C). Hourly climatology (D) of Δ[H+], separated by the same criteria as (C), with point size scaled to represent sample size.

Next, while we agree that CO2 uptake by seagrasses undeniably increases pH, many other concurrent processes affect the carbonate system, including mixing, aerobic and anaerobic respiration (and coincident alkalinity consumption/production), and air-water CO2 exchange. Of concern, then, is the attribution by R21 of all positive ΔpH values strictly to seagrass photosynthetic activity. We feel that it is only reasonable to attribute positive ΔpH values to seagrass photosynthetic activity as the dominant driver when excess dissolved oxygen (DO) is observed, such that ΔDO% is greater than 0 (ΔDO% = DO%seagrass – DO%non−vegetated). Tidal mixing between fresh and marine endmembers will also cause changes in pH independent of seagrass metabolism, as can be seen in the relationships between salinity and pH, with slopes that vary across sites and seasons (Figure 1B). Changes in salinity as small as 0.1 are associated with differences in pH on the same order as the mean ΔpH in R21 (mean ΔpH = 0.07 ± 0.008). It is therefore only appropriate to ascribe non-zero ΔpH to a “seagrass” driver when |ΔS| (|ΔS| = |Sseagrass – Snonvegetated|) is low enough to suggest minimal mixing effects, and we suggest a threshold of 0.1 for this dataset. Considering both of these conditions, we have re-analyzed the R21 dataset, (1) using Δ[H+] rather than ΔpH (for the reason above), and (2) separating Δ[H+] measurements by cases where ΔDO% and |ΔS| are above or below thresholds of 0% and 0.1, respectively.

Consistent with R21, we find that hourly average Δ[H+] was indeed negative (i.e., positive ΔpH) marginally more often than chance alone would dictate, at ~62% of the time across all sites (1,552 out of 2,501 hourly averages: Figure 1C). Approximately 38% of these potential “OA amelioration” events (negative Δ[H+]) coincided with both positive ΔDO% and |ΔS| <0.1 in the northern sites (left blue bars, top), suggesting seagrass ecosystem metabolism as a plausible cause. This fraction was only 8% in the southern sites (left blue bars, bottom). Across all sites, another ~20% of these negative Δ[H+] cases occurred when ΔDO% was positive but ΔS suggested a mixing effect on pH (left purple bars). To summarize, approximately two thirds (67%) of these Δ[H+] <0 excursions across all sites occurred when ΔDO% was negative or when |ΔS| was > 0.1 (left purple, red and green bars in Figure 1C), supporting our claim that local pH increases were most often caused by factors other than seagrass photosynthetic CO2 uptake. A seasonal analysis (Northern sites only) indicates that this feature is also persistent throughout the year (not shown in Figure 1C), and is therefore unlikely to be related to periods of seagrass senescence or growth.

That negative Δ[H+] and ΔDO% so often coincide is an intriguing feature of the R21 dataset. High allochthonous and autochthonous organic carbon subsidies in seagrass meadows enhance aerobic respiration (decreasing ΔDO%) but also stimulate anaerobic respiratory pathways in the sediment like nitrate and sulfate reduction that generate alkalinity and thereby buffer aerobic respiratory CO2 inputs. As a result, DO and pH variations are often decoupled in seagrass meadows (Van Dam et al., 2019), especially when benthic alkalinity inputs are apparent (Miller and Kelley, 2021). Net alkalinity production in the sediments, when bottom waters are oxygenated, can occur through denitrification or through the burial of reduced products of sulfate and iron reduction (FeSx). While these and other alkalinity sources are likely to affect seagrass ecosystem carbon chemistry (Van Dam et al., 2019; Akhand et al., 2020), even in the same field sites occupied in R21 (“MB”; Kindeberg et al., 2020), such sediment-water alkalinity fluxes are only just now explicitly being incorporated into “blue carbon” budgets (Reithmaier et al., 2021). Still, this leaves only 509, or ~20%, of all measurements as potentially related to a seagrass photosynthesis effect (Figure 1C, left teal bars), far below the 65% claimed in R21. This is partially balanced by the count of positive Δ[H+] measurements where ΔDO% is also below our threshold (n = 211, right red bars). That daytime pH increases are roughly balanced by low nighttime pH is in line with recent findings that seagrass net metabolism is typically close to zero, when assessed over a full diel cycle (Perez et al., 2018; Asmala et al., 2019; Van Dam et al., 2019; Akhand et al., 2020; Berger et al., 2020).

Lastly, the claim that OA amelioration persists over-night and “up to 21 days” should be revisited, for two main reasons. First, all R21 sites are mixed semidiurnal, with low tides ~0 m (Supplementary Figure 1, R21) and tidal ranges of 2-5 m, indicating complete replacement of the water column every tidal cycle. Water residence time shapes buffering in tidal seagrasses (Ribas-Ribas et al., 2011; Koweek et al., 2018), and in this case prevents the products of daytime photosynthesis from evading tidal flushing and persisting overnight. Such tidal impacts on seagrass carbon cycling are consistent with a global meta-analysis showing that tidal mixing drives energy budgets (hence carbon budgets) out of balance in these systems (Van Dam et al., 2021). Secondly, apparent daytime proton consumption (-Δ[H+]) did often coincide with +ΔDO and |ΔS| <0.1, consistent with seagrass ecosystem photosynthesis (Figure 1D; bottom left panel). However, -Δ[H+] also frequently coincided with other scenarios (Figure 1D; top left and bottom right panels), suggesting that -Δ[H+] was a general feature of the dataset regardless of daytime seagrass productivity, as argued by R21.

The authors conclude that seagrass-mitigation of low pH should be used as a management tool combatting coastal OA. Public audiences reading this will expect that support of seagrass restoration/protection will result in co-beneficial ecosystem services of OA-mitigation. However, the authors make a fundamental error in their treatment of pH by calculating and interpreting variations in ΔpH. This is mathematically incorrect, and our closer re-analysis of R21 data using a more appropriate scale (Δ[H+]) leads us to question the key claims of R21 regarding OA-amelioration. Our re-analysis indicates that any OA-amelioration effect due to seagrass aerobic metabolism was much more limited in spatial and temporal scope than suggested in R21. While seagrass restoration or protection is worthy in its own right, it may therefore fall short of the pH-mitigation effect promised in R21.

Author Contributions

BV conceptualized this work and conducted the data analysis. CL, MZ, MR-R, HW, and HT contributed equally to manuscript writing and revising. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.

Funding

This work was funded by Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (German Academic Exchange Service)—57429828 (to BV and HT).

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher's Note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

Acknowledgments

We thank Wiley Evans for his detailed and valuable input during the preparation of this manuscript. Thanks also to Aurora Ricart for the open exchange of information and helpful discussions of their dataset. Code for data analysis and figure generation is available at: https://rpubs.com/bvandam/SG_pH_reanalysis.

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Keywords: ocean acidification, seagrass, carbonate chemistry, CO2 system calculations, commentary articles

Citation: Van Dam B, Lopes C, Zeller MA, Ribas-Ribas M, Wang H and Thomas H (2021) Overstated Potential for Seagrass Meadows to Mitigate Coastal Ocean Acidification. Front. Mar. Sci. 8:729992. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2021.729992

Received: 07 July 2021; Accepted: 11 October 2021;
Published: 01 November 2021.

Edited by:

Antonio Cobelo-Garcia, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Spain

Reviewed by:

Toni Padin, Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas (CSIC), Spain

Copyright © 2021 Van Dam, Lopes, Zeller, Ribas-Ribas, Wang and Thomas. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Bryce Van Dam, YnJ5Y2UuZGFtJiN4MDAwNDA7aGVyZW9uLmRl

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.