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Ocean acidification increases iodine accumulation in kelp-based coastal food webs: Ocean acidification increases iodine in kelp. / Xu, Dong; Brennan, Georgina; Xu, Le et al.
In: Global Change Biology, Vol. 25, No. 2, 02.2019, p. 629-639.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Xu, D, Brennan, G, Xu, L, Zhang, XW, Fan, X, Han, WT, Mock, T, McMinn, A, Hutchins, DA & Ye, N 2019, 'Ocean acidification increases iodine accumulation in kelp-based coastal food webs: Ocean acidification increases iodine in kelp', Global Change Biology, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 629-639. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14467

APA

Xu, D., Brennan, G., Xu, L., Zhang, X. W., Fan, X., Han, W. T., Mock, T., McMinn, A., Hutchins, D. A., & Ye, N. (2019). Ocean acidification increases iodine accumulation in kelp-based coastal food webs: Ocean acidification increases iodine in kelp. Global Change Biology, 25(2), 629-639. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14467

CBE

Xu D, Brennan G, Xu L, Zhang XW, Fan X, Han WT, Mock T, McMinn A, Hutchins DA, Ye N. 2019. Ocean acidification increases iodine accumulation in kelp-based coastal food webs: Ocean acidification increases iodine in kelp. Global Change Biology. 25(2):629-639. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14467

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Xu D, Brennan G, Xu L, Zhang XW, Fan X, Han WT et al. Ocean acidification increases iodine accumulation in kelp-based coastal food webs: Ocean acidification increases iodine in kelp. Global Change Biology. 2019 Feb;25(2):629-639. Epub 2018 Oct 8. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14467

Author

Xu, Dong ; Brennan, Georgina ; Xu, Le et al. / Ocean acidification increases iodine accumulation in kelp-based coastal food webs : Ocean acidification increases iodine in kelp. In: Global Change Biology. 2019 ; Vol. 25, No. 2. pp. 629-639.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ocean acidification increases iodine accumulation in kelp-based coastal food webs

T2 - Ocean acidification increases iodine in kelp

AU - Xu, Dong

AU - Brennan, Georgina

AU - Xu, Le

AU - Zhang, Xiao W.

AU - Fan, Xiao

AU - Han, Wen T.

AU - Mock, Thomas

AU - McMinn, Andrew

AU - Hutchins, David A.

AU - Ye, Naihao

PY - 2019/2

Y1 - 2019/2

N2 - Kelp are main iodine accumulators in the ocean, and their growth and photosynthesis are likely to benefit from elevated seawater CO2 levels due to ocean acidification. However, there are currently no data on the effects of ocean acidification on iodine metabolism in kelp. As key primary producers in coastal ecosystems worldwide, any change in their iodine metabolism caused by climate change will potentially have important consequences for global geochemical cycles of iodine, including iodine levels of coastal food webs that underpin the nutrition of billions of humans around the world. Here, we found that elevated pCO2 enhanced growth and increased iodine accumulation not only in the model kelp Saccharina japonica using both short-term laboratory experiment and long-term in situ mesocosms, but also in several other edible and ecologically significant seaweeds using long-term in situ mesocosms. Transcriptomic and proteomic analysis of Saccharina japonica revealed that most vanadium-dependent haloperoxidase genes involved in iodine efflux during oxidative stress are down-regulated under increasing pCO2, suggesting that ocean acidification alleviates oxidative stress in kelp, which might contribute to their enhanced growth. When consumed by abalone (Haliotis discus), elevated iodine concentrations in S. japonica caused increased iodine accumulation in abalone, accompanied by reduced synthesis of thyroid hormones. Thus, our results suggest that kelp will benefit from ocean acidification by a reduction in environmental stress however, iodine levels in kelp-based coastal food webs will increase, with potential impacts on biogeochemical cycles of iodine in coastal ecosystems.

AB - Kelp are main iodine accumulators in the ocean, and their growth and photosynthesis are likely to benefit from elevated seawater CO2 levels due to ocean acidification. However, there are currently no data on the effects of ocean acidification on iodine metabolism in kelp. As key primary producers in coastal ecosystems worldwide, any change in their iodine metabolism caused by climate change will potentially have important consequences for global geochemical cycles of iodine, including iodine levels of coastal food webs that underpin the nutrition of billions of humans around the world. Here, we found that elevated pCO2 enhanced growth and increased iodine accumulation not only in the model kelp Saccharina japonica using both short-term laboratory experiment and long-term in situ mesocosms, but also in several other edible and ecologically significant seaweeds using long-term in situ mesocosms. Transcriptomic and proteomic analysis of Saccharina japonica revealed that most vanadium-dependent haloperoxidase genes involved in iodine efflux during oxidative stress are down-regulated under increasing pCO2, suggesting that ocean acidification alleviates oxidative stress in kelp, which might contribute to their enhanced growth. When consumed by abalone (Haliotis discus), elevated iodine concentrations in S. japonica caused increased iodine accumulation in abalone, accompanied by reduced synthesis of thyroid hormones. Thus, our results suggest that kelp will benefit from ocean acidification by a reduction in environmental stress however, iodine levels in kelp-based coastal food webs will increase, with potential impacts on biogeochemical cycles of iodine in coastal ecosystems.

U2 - 10.1111/gcb.14467

DO - 10.1111/gcb.14467

M3 - Article

VL - 25

SP - 629

EP - 639

JO - Global Change Biology

JF - Global Change Biology

SN - 1365-2486

IS - 2

ER -