Controls on boron isotopes in a cold-water coral and the cost of
resilience to ocean acidification
Abstract
Coral skeletal growth is sensitive to environmental change and may be
adversely impacted by an acidifying ocean. However, physiological
processes can also buffer biomineralization from external conditions,
providing apparent resilience to acidification in some species. These
same physiological processes affect skeletal composition and can impact
paleoenvironmental proxies. Understanding the mechanisms of coral
calcification is thus crucial for predicting the vulnerability of
different corals to ocean acidification and for accurately interpreting
coral-based climate records. Here, using boron isotope (δ11B)
measurements on cultured cold-water corals, we explain fundamental
features of coral calcification and its sensitivity to environmental
change. Boron isotopes are one of the most widely used proxies for past
seawater pH, and we observe the expected sensitivity between δ11B and
pH. Surprisingly, we also discover that coral δ11B is independently
sensitive to seawater dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). We can explain
this new DIC effect if we introduce boric acid diffusion across cell
membranes as a new flux within a geochemical model of biomineralization.
This model independently predicts the sensitivity of the δ11B-pH proxy,
without being trained to these data, even though calcifying fluid pH
(pHCF) is constant. Boric acid diffusion resolves why δ11B is a useful
proxy across a range of calcifiers, including foraminifera, even when
calcifying fluid pH differs from seawater. Our modeling shows that δ11B
cannot be interpreted unequivocally as a direct tracer of pHCF. Constant
pHCF implies similar calcification rates as seawater pH decreases, which
can explain the resilience of some corals to ocean acidification.
However, we show that this resilience has a hidden energetic cost such
that calcification becomes less efficient in an acidifying ocean