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Eocene emergence of highly calcifying coccolithophores despite declining atmospheric CO2
Claxton, L.M.; McClelland, H.L.O.; Hermoso, M.; Rickaby, R.E.M. (2022). Eocene emergence of highly calcifying coccolithophores despite declining atmospheric CO2. Nature Geoscience 15(10): 826-831. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41561-022-01006-0
In: Nature Geoscience. Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 1752-0894; e-ISSN 1752-0908, more
Related to:
Sheward, R.M. (2022). Cycling carbon with coccolithophores. Nature Geoscience 15(10): 758-759. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41561-022-01039-5, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Claxton, L.M.
  • McClelland, H.L.O.
  • Hermoso, M.
  • Rickaby, R.E.M.

Abstract
    Coccolithophores, a group of unicellular calcifying phytoplankton, have been major contributors to marine carbonate production since the calcite plates that they produce (coccoliths) first appeared in the fossil record over 200 million years ago (Ma). The response of this process to changes in environment on evolutionary timescales remains poorly understood, particularly in warm climates. Here we integrate a dataset consisting of carbon isotope ratios of size-separated coccolith calcite from marine sediments with a cell-scale model to interrogate cellular carbon fluxes and pCO2 through the Eocene (~55–34 Ma), Earth’s hottest interval of the past 100 million years. We show that the large coccolithophores that rose to dominate the oceans through the Eocene have higher calcification-to-carbon fixation ratios than their predecessors while the opposite is true for smaller coccolithophores. These changes, which occurred in the context of increasing ocean alkalization, may have played a role in an apparent positive carbon cycle feedback to decreasing pCO2. Our approach also provides independent support of multiproxy-based evidence for general pCO2 decline through the Eocene in step with temperature. Together, this challenges the emerging view that a general decline in pCO2 reduces calcification on evolutionary timescales.

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