“…This advance can help to resolve the problem of differing temporal and spatial scales among techniques used in coral calcification studies (Holcomb et al, ). Although geochemical (i.e., isotopic and elemental) analyses of coral skeletons are effective at deriving the carbonate system of the calcifying fluid (DeCarlo, Holcomb, & McCulloch, ; McCulloch, D'Olivo Cordero, Falter, Holcomb, & Trotter, ), such studies have been difficult to reconcile with alternative approaches based on inserting micro‐sensors into the coral calcifying fluid (Al‐Horani, Al‐Moghrabi, & De Beer, ; Cai et al, ; Ries, ; Sevilgen et al, ), or imaging the calcifying fluid of corals exposed to pH‐sensitive dyes (Comeau et al, ; Holcomb et al, ; Venn, Tambutte, Holcomb, Allemand, & Tambutte, ). Conversely, Raman spectroscopy can now be applied in vivo at temporal and spatial scales comparable to the micro‐sensor studies (Figure ), as well as to bulk powders for comparison to isotopic measurements (e.g., DeCarlo et al, , DeCarlo, Comeau et al, ).…”