Linkages between seagrass tissue O2 dynamics and ecosystem oxidation and feedbacks are revealed using microsensors in situ

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Linkages between seagrass tissue O2 dynamics and ecosystem oxidation and feedbacks are revealed using microsensors in situ. / Koch, Marguerite; Johnson, Christopher; MacLeod, Kasey; Travis, Levi; Madden, Chris; Pedersen, Ole.

2023. 221 Abstract fra Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration, Coral Springs, USA.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Koch, M, Johnson, C, MacLeod, K, Travis, L, Madden, C & Pedersen, O 2023, 'Linkages between seagrass tissue O2 dynamics and ecosystem oxidation and feedbacks are revealed using microsensors in situ', Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration, Coral Springs, USA, 17/04/2023 - 20/04/2023 s. 221.

APA

Koch, M., Johnson, C., MacLeod, K., Travis, L., Madden, C., & Pedersen, O. (2023). Linkages between seagrass tissue O2 dynamics and ecosystem oxidation and feedbacks are revealed using microsensors in situ. 221. Abstract fra Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration, Coral Springs, USA.

Vancouver

Koch M, Johnson C, MacLeod K, Travis L, Madden C, Pedersen O. Linkages between seagrass tissue O2 dynamics and ecosystem oxidation and feedbacks are revealed using microsensors in situ. 2023. Abstract fra Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration, Coral Springs, USA.

Author

Koch, Marguerite ; Johnson, Christopher ; MacLeod, Kasey ; Travis, Levi ; Madden, Chris ; Pedersen, Ole. / Linkages between seagrass tissue O2 dynamics and ecosystem oxidation and feedbacks are revealed using microsensors in situ. Abstract fra Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration, Coral Springs, USA.1 s.

Bibtex

@conference{bbd35be5e1144825984c6e76340d04ad,
title = "Linkages between seagrass tissue O2 dynamics and ecosystem oxidation and feedbacks are revealed using microsensors in situ",
abstract = "Water column hypoxia, low tissue pO2 and H2S intrusion, a known phytotoxin, are linked to global seagrass decline. While many lab experiments have examined these relationships, only field studies capture the complexity of gas dynamics in situ. We examined internal pO2 and H2S dynamics in a dominant tropical seagrass Thalassia testudinum using microsensors. Based on 12 field deployments (48–72-h) across seasons, we show that T. testudinum has a high capacity for daytime leaf oxidation (42-53 kPa) that sustains oxic conditions in its tissues and supersaturates the water column with O2 (>21 kPa). While internal daytime O2 is consumed near sunset, positive feedback between seagrass O2 production and the supersaturated water column going into the night contributes to buffering of internal plant hypoxia in the beginning of the night. Leaf meristems went anoxic/hypoxic (0.6 kPa) at night even with high daytime irradiances, indicating a high ecosystem O2 consumption, and reliance on water column pO2 (19 kPa) through leaf pO2 (9 kPa) to prevent H2S from entering the meristem at night. Newly recruiting shoots into bare sediment also had the ability to minimize H2S intrusion. At ambient irradiance, we only detected H2S in the meristem when water column pO2 was hypoxic (<2 kPa) coincident with maximum water column temperatures (33 oC), an occurrence likely to increase with global warming. These data reinforce the importance of water quality management to sustain seagrass-dominated systems, particularly in nutrient-enriched estuaries and coastal lagoons.",
author = "Marguerite Koch and Christopher Johnson and Kasey MacLeod and Levi Travis and Chris Madden and Ole Pedersen",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
pages = "221",
note = "Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration, GEER ; Conference date: 17-04-2023 Through 20-04-2023",
url = "https://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/geer/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Linkages between seagrass tissue O2 dynamics and ecosystem oxidation and feedbacks are revealed using microsensors in situ

AU - Koch, Marguerite

AU - Johnson, Christopher

AU - MacLeod, Kasey

AU - Travis, Levi

AU - Madden, Chris

AU - Pedersen, Ole

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Water column hypoxia, low tissue pO2 and H2S intrusion, a known phytotoxin, are linked to global seagrass decline. While many lab experiments have examined these relationships, only field studies capture the complexity of gas dynamics in situ. We examined internal pO2 and H2S dynamics in a dominant tropical seagrass Thalassia testudinum using microsensors. Based on 12 field deployments (48–72-h) across seasons, we show that T. testudinum has a high capacity for daytime leaf oxidation (42-53 kPa) that sustains oxic conditions in its tissues and supersaturates the water column with O2 (>21 kPa). While internal daytime O2 is consumed near sunset, positive feedback between seagrass O2 production and the supersaturated water column going into the night contributes to buffering of internal plant hypoxia in the beginning of the night. Leaf meristems went anoxic/hypoxic (0.6 kPa) at night even with high daytime irradiances, indicating a high ecosystem O2 consumption, and reliance on water column pO2 (19 kPa) through leaf pO2 (9 kPa) to prevent H2S from entering the meristem at night. Newly recruiting shoots into bare sediment also had the ability to minimize H2S intrusion. At ambient irradiance, we only detected H2S in the meristem when water column pO2 was hypoxic (<2 kPa) coincident with maximum water column temperatures (33 oC), an occurrence likely to increase with global warming. These data reinforce the importance of water quality management to sustain seagrass-dominated systems, particularly in nutrient-enriched estuaries and coastal lagoons.

AB - Water column hypoxia, low tissue pO2 and H2S intrusion, a known phytotoxin, are linked to global seagrass decline. While many lab experiments have examined these relationships, only field studies capture the complexity of gas dynamics in situ. We examined internal pO2 and H2S dynamics in a dominant tropical seagrass Thalassia testudinum using microsensors. Based on 12 field deployments (48–72-h) across seasons, we show that T. testudinum has a high capacity for daytime leaf oxidation (42-53 kPa) that sustains oxic conditions in its tissues and supersaturates the water column with O2 (>21 kPa). While internal daytime O2 is consumed near sunset, positive feedback between seagrass O2 production and the supersaturated water column going into the night contributes to buffering of internal plant hypoxia in the beginning of the night. Leaf meristems went anoxic/hypoxic (0.6 kPa) at night even with high daytime irradiances, indicating a high ecosystem O2 consumption, and reliance on water column pO2 (19 kPa) through leaf pO2 (9 kPa) to prevent H2S from entering the meristem at night. Newly recruiting shoots into bare sediment also had the ability to minimize H2S intrusion. At ambient irradiance, we only detected H2S in the meristem when water column pO2 was hypoxic (<2 kPa) coincident with maximum water column temperatures (33 oC), an occurrence likely to increase with global warming. These data reinforce the importance of water quality management to sustain seagrass-dominated systems, particularly in nutrient-enriched estuaries and coastal lagoons.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

SP - 221

T2 - Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration

Y2 - 17 April 2023 through 20 April 2023

ER -

ID: 331643838