Articles | Volume 14, issue 19
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-14-4485-2017
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-14-4485-2017
Research article
 | 
12 Oct 2017
Research article |  | 12 Oct 2017

The regulation of coralline algal physiology, an in situ study of Corallina officinalis (Corallinales, Rhodophyta)

Christopher James Williamson, Rupert Perkins, Matthew Voller, Marian Louise Yallop, and Juliet Brodie

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Cited articles

Bensoussasn, N. and Gattuso, J-P.: Community primary production and calcification in a NW Mediterranean ecosystem dominated by calcareous macroalgae, Mar. Ecol.-Prog. Ser., 334, 37–45, 2007.
Borowitzka, M. A.: Photosynthesis and calcification in the articulated coralline red algae Amphiroa anceps and A. foliacea, Mar. Biol., 62, 17–23, 1981.
Borowitzka, M. A.: Morphological and cytological aspects of algal calcification, Int. Rev. Cytol. Surv. Cell Biol., 74, 127–162, 1982.
Breeman, A. M.: Relative importance of temperature and other factors in determining geographic boundaries of seaweeds – experimental and phenological evidence, Helgolander Meeresun., 42, 199–241, 1988.
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Short summary
Red calcified seaweeds in UK rock pools have seasonal patterns in growth and photosynthesis driven by seawater temperature, light and the chemistry of rock pool water. This is important given future changes in environmental factors such as climate change and ocean acidification. Photosynthesis and calcification are strongly coupled and depend on light and temperature, whilst dissolution is regulated by rock pool water chemistry and is thus particularly vulnerable to environmental change.
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