Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-2lccl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T09:07:42.866Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chapter 7 - Calcium Carbonate Production and Contribution to Coastal Sediments

from Assessment of Major Ecosystem Services from the Marine Environment (Other than Provisioning Services)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 May 2017

United Nations
Affiliation:
Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea, Office of Legal Affairs
Get access

Summary

Calcium carbonate production in coastal environments

Biological production of calcium carbonate in the oceans is an important process. Although carbonate is produced in the open ocean (pelagic, see Chapter 5), this chapter concentrates on production in coastal waters (neritic) because this contributes sediment to the coast through skeletal breakdown producing sand and gravel deposits on beaches, across continental shelves, and within reefs. Marine organisms with hard body parts precipitate calcium carbonate as the minerals calcite or aragonite. Corals, molluscs, foraminifera, bryozoans, red algae (for example the algal rims that characterize reef crests on Indo-Pacific reefs) are particularly productive, as well as some species of green algae (especially Halimeda). Upon death, these calcareous organisms break down by physical, chemical, and biological erosion processes through a series of discrete sediment sizes (Perry et al., 2011). Neritic carbonate production has been estimated to be approximately 2.5 Gt year-1(Milliman and Droxler, 1995; Heap et al., 2009). The greatest contributors are coral reefs that form complex structures covering a total area of more than 250,000 km2 (Spalding and Grenfell, 1997; Vecsei, 2004), but other organisms, such as oysters, may also form smaller reef structures.

Global climate change will affect carbonate production and breakdown in the ocean, which will have implications for coastal sediment budgets. Rising sea level will displace many beaches landwards (Nicholls et al., 2007). Low-lying reef islands called sand cays, formed over the past few millennia on the rim of atolls, are particularly vulnerable, together with the communities that live on them. Rising sea level can also result in further reef growth and sediment production where there are healthy coral reefs (Buddemeier and Hopley, 1988). In areas where corals have already been killed or damaged by human activities, however, reefs may not be able to keep pace with the rising sea level in which case wave energy will be able to propagate more freely across the reef crest thereby exposing shorelines to higher levels of wave energy (Storlazzi et al., 2011; see also Chapter 43).

Reefs have experienced episodes of coral bleaching and mortality in recent years caused by unusually warm waters. Increased carbon dioxide concentrations are also causing ocean waters to become more acidic, which may affect the biological production and supply of carbonate sand. Bleaching and acidification can reduce coral growth and limit the ability of reef-building corals and other organisms to produce calcium carbonate (Kroeker et al., 2010).

Type
Chapter
Information
The First Global Integrated Marine Assessment
World Ocean Assessment I
, pp. 149 - 158
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, T.R., Fletcher, C.H., Barbee, M.M., Frazer, L.N., Romine, B.M., (2015). Doubling of coastal erosion under rising sea level by mid-century in Hawaii. Natural Hazards, doi 10.1007/s11069-015-1698-6.
Andersson, A.J., Mackenzie, F.T., (2012). Revisiting four scientific debates in ocean acidification research. Biogeosciences 9: 893–905.Google Scholar
Andersson, A.J., Gledhill, D., (2013). Ocean acidification and coral reefs: effects on breakdown, dissolution, and net ecosystem calcification. Annual Reviews of Marine Science 5, 321–48.Google Scholar
Andersson, A.J., Yeakel, K.L., Bates, N.R., de Putron, S.J., (2013). Partial offsets in ocean acidification from changing coral reef biogeochemistry. Nature Climate Change 4, 56-61.Google Scholar
Anthony, K., Kline, D., Diaz-Pulido, G., Dove, S., Hoegh-Guldberg, O., (2008). Ocean acidification causes bleaching and productivity loss in coral reef builders. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 105, 17442-17446.Google Scholar
Ball, M.M., (1967). Carbonate sand bodies of Florida and the Bahamas. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 37, 556-591.Google Scholar
Barnett, J., Adger, N., (2003). Climate dangers and atoll countries. Climatic Change. 61, 321-337.Google Scholar
Barton, A., Hales, B., Waldbusser, G.G., Langdon, C., Feely, R.A., (2012). The Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, shows negative correlation to naturally elevated carbon dioxide levels: implications for near-term ocean acidification effects. Chinese Journal of Limnology and Oceanography 57, 698-710.Google Scholar
Biribo, N., Woodroffe, C.D., (2013). Historical area and shoreline change of reef islands around Tarawa Atoll, Kiribati. Sustainability Science 8, 345–362.Google Scholar
Birkeland, C. (ed.) (1996). Life and Death of Coral Reefs. (New York, Chapman & Hall).
Brewer, P.G., Dyrssen, D., (1985). Chemical oceanography of the Persian Gulf. Progress in Oceanography 14, 41-55.Google Scholar
Brooke, B., (2001). The distribution of carbonate eolianite. Earth-Science Reviews 55, 135-164.Google Scholar
Brown, B.E., Dunne, R.P., (1988). The environmental impact of coral mining in the Maldives. Environmental Conservation 15, 159-166.Google Scholar
Bruun, P., (1962). Sea-level rise as a cause of shore erosion. American Society of Civil Engineering Proceedings, Journal of Waterways and Harbors Division 88, 117-130.Google Scholar
Buddemeier, R.W., Hopley, D., (1988). Turn-ons and turn-offs: causes and mechanisms of the initiation and termination of coral reef growth. Proceedings of the 6th International Coral Reef Congress 1, 253-261.Google Scholar
Cambers, G. (2009). Caribbean beach changes and climate change adaptation. Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management, 12, 168-176.Google Scholar
Carannante, G., Esteban, M., Milliman, J.D., Simone, L. (1988). Carbonate lithofacies as paleolatitude indicators: problems and limitations. Sedimentary Geology 60, 333-346.Google Scholar
Cesar, H., (1996). Economic analysis of Indonesian coral reefs. World Bank Environment Department, Washington DC, USA. p. 103.
Charlier, R.H., (2002). Impact on the coastal environment of marine aggregates mining. International Journal of Environmental Studies 59, 297-322.Google Scholar
Church, J.A., Clark, P.U., Cazenave, A., Gregory, J.M., Jevrejeva, S., Levermann, A., Merrifield, M.A., Milne, G.A., Nerem, R.S., Nunn, P.D., Payne, A.J., Pfeffer, W.T., Stammer, D., Unnikrishnan, A.S., 2013. Sea Level Change, in: Stocker, T.F., Plattner, G.-|K., Tignor, M., Allen, S.K., Boschung, J., Nauels, A., Xia, Y., Bex, V., Midgley, P.M. (Eds.), Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, pp. 1137-1216.
Cooper, J.A.G., Pilkey, O.H., (2004). Sea-level rise and shoreline retreat: time to abandon the Bruun Rule. Global and Planetary Change 43, 157-171.Google Scholar
Cowell, P.J., Thom, B.G., Jones, R.A., Everts, C.H., Simanovic, D., (2006). Management of uncertainty in predicting climate-change impacts on beaches. Journal of Coastal Research 22, 232-245.Google Scholar
De'ath, G., Lough, J.M., Fabricus, K.E., (2009). Declining coral calcification on the Great Barrier Reef. Science 323, 116-119.Google Scholar
Dickinson, W.R., (2009). Pacific atoll living: How long already and until when? GSA Today 19, 4-10.Google Scholar
D'Olivo, J.P., McCulloch, M.T., Judd, K., (2013). Long-term records of coral calcification across the central Great Barrier Reef: assessing the impacts of river runoff and climate change. Coral Reefs 32, 999-1012.Google Scholar
Donner, S., (2012). Sea level rise and the ongoing battle of Tarawa. EOS, Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 93, 169-176.Google Scholar
Falter, J., Lowe, R., Zhang, Z., McCulloch, M., (2013). Physical and biological controls on the carbonate chemistry of coral reef waters: effects of metabolism, wave forcing, sea level, and geomorphology. PLoS One 8, e53303.Google Scholar
Farbotko, C., Lazrus, H. (2012). The first climate refugees? Contesting global narratives of climate change in Tuvalu. Global Environmental Change 22, 382-390.Google Scholar
Fish, M.R., Cote, I.M., Gill, J.A., Jones, A.P., Renshoff, S., Watkinson, A. (2005). Predicting the impact of sea-Level rise on Caribbean sea turtle nesting habitat. Conservation Biology 19, 482-491.Google Scholar
Ford, M., (2012). Shoreline changes on an urban atoll in the central Pacific Ocean: Majuro Atoll, Marshall Islands. Journal of Coastal Research 28, 11-22.Google Scholar
Ford, M., (2013). Shoreline changes interpreted from multi-temporal aerial photographs and high resolution satellite images: Wotje Atoll, Marshall Islands. Remote Sensing of Environment 135, 130-140.Google Scholar
Frank, T.D., James, N.P., Bone, Y., Malcolm, I., Bobak, L.E., (2014). Late Quaternary carbonate deposition at the bottom of the world. Sedimentary Geology, 306, 1-16.Google Scholar
Fujita, K., Osawa, Y., Kayanne, H., Ide, Y., Yamano, H. (2009). Distribution and sediment production of large benthic foraminifers on reef flats of the Majuro Atoll, Marshall Islands. Coral Reefs 28, 29-45.Google Scholar
Glynn, P.W., (1996). Coral reef bleaching: facts, hypotheses and implications. Global Change Biology 2, 495-509.Google Scholar
Gourlay, M.R., Hacker, J.L.F. (1991). Raine Island: coastal processes and sedimentology. CH40/91, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Queensland, Brisbane.
Grady, A.E., Reidenbach, M.A., Moore, L.J., Storlazzi, C.D., Elias, E., (2013). The influence of sea level rise and changes in fringing reef morphology on gradients in alongshore sediment transport. Geophysical Research Letters 40, 3096–3101.Google Scholar
Hamylton, S.M., East, H., (2012). A geospatial appraisal of ecological and geomorphic change on Diego Garcia Atoll, Chagos Islands (British Indian Ocean Territory). Remote Sensing 4, 3444-3461.Google Scholar
Hamylton, S., (2014). Will coral islands maintain their growth over the next century? A deterministic model of sediment availability at Lady Elliot Island, Great Barrier Reef. PLoS ONE 9, e94067.Google Scholar
Harney, J.N., Fletcher, C.H., (2003). A budget of carbonate framework and sediment production, Kailua Bay, Oahu, Hawaii. Journal of Sedimentary Research 73, 856-868.Google Scholar
Hart, D.E., Kench, P.S., (2007). Carbonate production of an emergent reef platform, Warraber Island, Torres Strait, Australia. Coral Reefs 26, 53-68.Google Scholar
Heap, P.T.A.D. Harris, L. Fountain, (2009). Neritic carbonate for six submerged coral reefs from northern Australia: Implications for Holocene global carbon dioxide. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 283, 77-90.Google Scholar
Hoegh-Guldberg, O., (1999). Climate change, coral bleaching and the future of the world's coral reefs. Marine and Freshwater Research 50, 839-866.Google Scholar
Hoegh-Guldberg, O., (2004). Coral reefs in a century of rapid environmental change. Symbiosis 37, 1-31.Google Scholar
Hoegh-Guldberg, O., Mumby, P.J., Hooten, A.J., Steneck, R.S., Greenfield, P., Gomez, E., Harvell, C.D., Sale, P.F., Edwards, A.J., Caldeira, K., Knowlton, N., Eakin, C.M., Glesias-Prieto, R., Muthiga, N., Bradbury, R.H., Dubi, A., Hatziolos, M.E. (2007). Coral reefs under rapid climate change and ocean acidification. Science 318, 1737-1742.Google Scholar
Houston, J.R., Dean, R.G. (2014). Shoreline change on the east coast of Florida. Journal of Coastal Research 30, 647-660.Google Scholar
Hopley, D., Smithers, S.G. and Parnell, K., (2007). Geomorphology of the Great Barrier Reef: development, diversity and change. Cambridge University Press.
James, N.P., Collins, L.B., Bone, Y., Hallock, P., (1999). Subtropical carbonates in a temperate realm: modern sediments on the southwest Australian shelf. Journal of Sedimentary Research 69, 1297-1321.Google Scholar
James, N.P., Bone, Y., (2011). Neritic carbonate sediments in a temperate realm. Springer, Dordrecht.
Kroeker, K.J., Kordas, R.L., Crim, R.N., Singh, G.G. (2010). Meta-analysis reveals negative yet variable effects of ocean acidification on marine organisms. Ecology Letters 13, 1419-1434.Google Scholar
Leon, J.X., Woodroffe, C.D., (2013). Morphological characterisation of reef types in Torres Strait and an assessment of their carbonate production, Marine Geology 338, 64-75.Google Scholar
Maragos, J.E., Baines, G.B.K. and Beveridge, P.J. (1973). Tropical cyclone creates a new land formation on Funafuti atoll. Science 181: 1161-1164.Google Scholar
Mazaris, A.D., Matsinos, G., Pantis, J.D. (2009). Evaluating the impacts of coastal squeeze on sea turtle nesting. Ocean & Coastal Management 52, 139-145.Google Scholar
McCulloch, M., Falter, J.L., Trotter, J., Montagna, P., (2012). Coral resilience to ocean acidification and global warming through pH up-regulation. Nature Climate Change 2, 1–5.Google Scholar
McGranahan, G., Balk, D., Anderson, B., (2007). The rising tide: assessing the risks of climate change and human settlements in low elevation costal zones. Environment and Urbanization 19, 17-37.Google Scholar
McKenzie, E., Woodruff, A., McClennen, C., (2006). “Economic assessment of the true costs of aggregate mining in Majuro Atoll, Republic of the Marshall Islands”. SOPAC Technical Report 383 p. 74.Google Scholar
Milliman, J.D., and Droxler, A.W. (1995). Calcium carbonate sedimentation in the global ocean: Linkages between the neritic and pelagic environments. Oceanography 8(3):92–94, http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.1995.04.Google Scholar
Mimura, N., (1999). Vulnerability of island countries in the South Pacific to sea level rise and climate change. Climate Research 12, 137-143.Google Scholar
Moberg, F. Folke, C., (1999). Ecological goods and services of coral reef ecosystems. Ecological Economics 29, 215–233.Google Scholar
Montaggioni, L.F., Braithwaite, C.J.R., (2009). Quaternary Coral Reef Systems: history, development processes and controlling factors. Elsevier, Amsterdam.
Nelson, C.S., (1988). An introductory perspective on non-tropical shelf carbonates. Sedimentary Geology 60, 3-12.Google Scholar
Neumann, A.C., Macintyre, I., (1985). Reef response to sea level rise: keep-up, catchup or give-up. Proceedings of the 5th International Coral Reef Congress 3, 105-110.Google Scholar
Nicholls, R.J., Wong, P.P., Burkett, V.R., Codignotto, J.O., Hay, J.E., McLean, R.F., Ragoonaden, S. and Woodroffe, C.D., et al., Coastal systems and low-lying areas. In: Parry, M.L., Canziani, O.F., Palutikof, J.P., van der Linden, P.J., Hanson, C.E., (Editors) (2007), Climate Change 2007: impacts, adaptation and vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Cambridge University Press, pp. 315-357.
Perry, C.T., Smithers, S.G., (2011). Cycles of coral reef ‘turn-on’, rapid growth and ‘turn-off’ over the past 8500 years: a context for understanding modern ecological states and trajectories. Global Change Biology 17, 76–86.Google Scholar
Perry, C.T., Kench, P.S., Smithers, S.G., Riegl, B., Yamano, H., O'Leary, M.J., (2011). Implications of reef ecosystem change for the stability and maintenance of coral reef islands. Global Change Biology 17, 3679-3696.Google Scholar
Perry, C., Edinger, E., Kench, P., Murphy, G., Smithers, S., Steneck, R., Mumby, P., (2012). Estimating rates of biologically driven coral reef framework production and erosion: a new census-based carbonate budget methodology and applications to the reefs of Bonaire. Coral Reefs 31, 853–868.Google Scholar
Pilkey, O.H., Neal, W.J., Cooper, J.A.G., Kelley, J.T., (2011). The World's Beaches: A global guide to the science of the shoreline. University of California Press.
Purdy, E.G., Gischler, E., (2005). The transient nature of the empty bucket model of reef sedimentation. Sedimentary Geology 175, 35-47.Google Scholar
Purser, B.H. (Ed) (1973). The Persian Gulf: Holocene carbonate sedimentation and diagenesis in a shallow epicontinental sea.Springer-Verlag.
Ramalho, R.S., Quartau, R., Trenhaile, A.S., Mitchell, N.C., Woodroffe, C.D., Ávila, S.P. (2013) Coastal evolution on volcanic oceanic islands: a complex interplay between volcanism, erosion, sedimentation, sea-level change and biogenic production. Earth-Science Reviews, 127: 140-170.Google Scholar
Rankey, E.C., (2011). Nature and stability of atoll island shorelines: Gilbert Island chain, Kiribati, equatorial Pacific. Sedimentology 58, 1831-1859.Google Scholar
Rankey, E.C. (2011) Nature and stability of atoll island shorelines: Gilbert Island chain, Kiribati, equatorial Pacific. Sedimentology 58, 1831-1859.Google Scholar
Ridd, P.V., Teixeira da Silva, E., Stieglitz, T., (2013). Have coral calcification rates slowed in the last twenty years? Marine Geology 346, 392-399.Google Scholar
Ritchie, W., Mather, A.S., (1984). “The beaches of Scotland”. Commissioned by the Countryside Commission for Scotland 1984, Report No. 109. http://www.snh.org. uk/pdfs/publications/commissioned_reports/ReportNo109.pdfGoogle Scholar
Scoffin, T.P., An Introduction to Carbonate Sediments and Rocks. (1987). Chapman & Hall, New York, 274 pp.
Short, A.D., (2006). Australian beach systems‚ nature and distribution. Journal of Coastal Research 22, 11-27.Google Scholar
Short, A.D., (2010). Sediment transport around Australia - sources, mechanisms, rates and barrier forms. Journal of Coastal Research 26, 395-402.Google Scholar
Smithers, S.G., Harvey, N., Hopley, D. and Woodroffe, C.D., (2007). Vulnerability of geomorphological features in the Great Barrier Reef to climate change. In Johnson, J.E., Marshall, P.A. (Editors) in Climate Change and the Great Barrier Reef. Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and Australian Greenhouse Office, Australia, pp. 667-716.Google Scholar
Spalding, M.D. and Grenfell, A.M., (1997). New estimates of global and regional coral reef areas. Coral Reefs 16, 225-230.Google Scholar
Storlazzi, C.D., Elias, E., Field, M.E. and Presto, M.K., (2011). Numerical modeling of the impact of sea-level rise on fringing coral reef hydrodynamics and sediment transport. Coral Reefs 30, 83-96.Google Scholar
Trotter, J., Montagna, P., McCulloch, M., Silenzi, S., Reynaud, S., Mortimer, G., Martin, S., Ferrier-Pages, C., Gattuso, J-P., Rodolfo-Metalpa, R., (2011). Quantifying the pH 'vital effect' in the temperate zooxanthellate coral Cladocora caespitosa: Validation of the boron seawater pH proxy. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 303, 163–173.Google Scholar
Vecsei, A., (2001). Fore-reef carbonate production: development of a regional censusbased method and first estimates. Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 175, 185-200.Google Scholar
Vecsei, A., (2003). Systematic yet enigmatic depth distribution of the world's modern warm-water carbonate platforms: the ‘depth window’. Terra Nova 15, 170-175.Google Scholar
Vecsei, A., (2004). A new estimate of global reefal carbonate production including the fore-reefs. Global and Planetary Change 43, 1-18.Google Scholar
Venn, A., Tambutté, E., Holcomb, M., Allemand, D., Tambutté, S., (2011). Live tissue imaging shows reef corals elevate pH under their calcifying tissue relative to seawater. PLoS One 6, e20013.Google Scholar
Webb, A.P., Kench, P., (2010). The Dynamic Response of Reef Islands to Sea Level Rise: Evidence from Multi-Decadal Analysis of Island Change in the Central Pacific. Global and Planetary Change 72, 234-246.Google Scholar
Woodroffe, C.D., (2008). Reef-island topography and the vulnerability of atolls to sea-level rise. Global and Planetary Change 62, 77-96.Google Scholar
Woodroffe, C.D., Morrison, R.J., (2001). Reef-island accretion and soil development, Makin Island, Kiribati, central Pacific. Catena 44, 245-261.Google Scholar
Woodroffe, C.D., Kennedy, D.M., Jones, B.G., Phipps, C.V.G. (2004). Geomorphology and Late Quaternary development of Middleton and Elizabeth Reefs. Coral Reefs 23, 249-262.Google Scholar
Woodroffe, C.D., Samosorn, B., Hua, Q., Hart, D.E., (2007). Incremental accretion of a sandy reef island over the past 3000 years indicated by component- specific radiocarbon dating, Geophysical Research Letters 34, L03602, doi:10.1029/2006GL028875.Google Scholar
Woodroffe, C.D., Webster, J.M., (2014). Coral reefs and sea-level change. Marine Geology doi 10.1016/j.margeo.2013.12.006.
Yates, M.L., Le Cozannet, G., Garcin, M., Salai, E., Walker, P., (2013). Multidecadal atoll shoreline change on Manihi and Manuae, French Polynesia. Journal of Coastal Research 29 870-882.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×