The technique could provide a relatively inexpensive solution to one of the biggest threats facing coral reefs.
An estimated 30 to 60 per cent of all the coral reefs have died since the Industrial Revolution as the oceans absorbs more CO2 and become increasingly acidic.
Ocean acidification harms a variety of marine organisms, but especially those that use calcium carbonate to assemble their skeletons and shells, such as coral, mussels and oysters.
"Ocean acidification makes it difficult for corals to calcify and makes it easier to erode these skeletal remains, threatening the integrity of the entire reef," Koweek said.
A healthy coral reef provides a home to thousands of organisms, which island subsistence communities rely on for the bulk of their diet.
A reef's mere presence can quell the waves whipped up by a surging storm, thereby guarding low-lying coastal towns from flooding.
"The nice thing about the bubble pulse method is that it provides an engineering technique that can help bring us closer to conditions that coral reefs were used to 100 years ago, and to which they've been adapted for many thousands of years," said study coauthor Rob Dunbar, a professor at Stanford University.
Throughout the night, the kelp would respire, adding CO2 to the water, and thus acting to simulate the CO2 buildup that occurs from respiration in coastal ecosystems at night.
The team would then arrive the following morning, remove the kelp, and begin to bubble the high CO2 seawater in order to test how bubbling lowers the CO2 concentration.
They found that just two hours of bubble-mediated ventilation could increase the transfer of CO2 from the ocean into the air by 10 to 30 times.
The study was published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology.
