TY - JOUR
T1 - Structural and functional dynamics of coralline algal systems under warming scenarios
T2 - Insights into vulnerability, and resilience
AU - Bautista-García, Andrea
AU - Valdespino-Castillo, Patricia M.
AU - Pi-Puig, Teresa
AU - Favoretto, Fabio
AU - Merino-Ibarra, Martín
AU - Ceja-Navarro, Javier A.
AU - Espinosa-Matías, Silvia
AU - Tadeo León, Javier
AU - Blanco-Jarvio, Anidia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2025/5
Y1 - 2025/5
N2 - Globally, climate change affects reef ecosystems, causing community reconfigurations and ecological impacts. Coralline rhodophyta are one of the reef groups most vulnerable to synergistic warmer temperatures, and ocean acidification. Yet, mineralogic, microstructural, and chemical studies of their thalli are necessary to understand their vulnerability and resilience. Here, we studied mineralogy, microstructure, and chemistry of adjacent coralline rhodophyta systems in La Paz Bay: Neogoniolithon trichotomum-dominated tidal pools, and rhodoliths from a shallow rhodolith bed at San Lorenzo channel. These systems depicted mineral diversity, including different phases of high-magnesium calcites in rhodoliths. The carbonates in N. trichotomum included Mg-calcite, aragonite, ankerite, and Fe-carbonates. Compositional X-ray maps of calcium and magnesium in rhodoliths reproduce very well the concentric growth band-structure. In a complementary way, the bands richest in calcium are the poorest in magnesium, and vice versa. They are most likely related to the high-magnesium phases detected by bulk XRD-Rietveld, as indicated by their similar EPMA-WDS Mg:Ca ratios. Chemical imaging at the microscale revealed iron was distributed in the primary mineral structure, in contrast with detritic elements, such as Al and Si, located in the algal surface (perithallus). Because algal elemental content is sensitive to environmental conditions, La Paz Bay coralline rhodophyta systems emerge as interesting models to monitor high-magnesium carbonate, in a scenario of tropicalization.
AB - Globally, climate change affects reef ecosystems, causing community reconfigurations and ecological impacts. Coralline rhodophyta are one of the reef groups most vulnerable to synergistic warmer temperatures, and ocean acidification. Yet, mineralogic, microstructural, and chemical studies of their thalli are necessary to understand their vulnerability and resilience. Here, we studied mineralogy, microstructure, and chemistry of adjacent coralline rhodophyta systems in La Paz Bay: Neogoniolithon trichotomum-dominated tidal pools, and rhodoliths from a shallow rhodolith bed at San Lorenzo channel. These systems depicted mineral diversity, including different phases of high-magnesium calcites in rhodoliths. The carbonates in N. trichotomum included Mg-calcite, aragonite, ankerite, and Fe-carbonates. Compositional X-ray maps of calcium and magnesium in rhodoliths reproduce very well the concentric growth band-structure. In a complementary way, the bands richest in calcium are the poorest in magnesium, and vice versa. They are most likely related to the high-magnesium phases detected by bulk XRD-Rietveld, as indicated by their similar EPMA-WDS Mg:Ca ratios. Chemical imaging at the microscale revealed iron was distributed in the primary mineral structure, in contrast with detritic elements, such as Al and Si, located in the algal surface (perithallus). Because algal elemental content is sensitive to environmental conditions, La Paz Bay coralline rhodophyta systems emerge as interesting models to monitor high-magnesium carbonate, in a scenario of tropicalization.
KW - Biominerals microstructure
KW - Carbonates
KW - High-magnesium calcite
KW - XRD-Rietveld
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212001167&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85212001167&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.aquabot.2024.103851
DO - 10.1016/j.aquabot.2024.103851
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212001167
SN - 0304-3770
VL - 198
JO - Aquatic Botany
JF - Aquatic Botany
M1 - 103851
ER -