Experiment: Adaptation of a globally important coccolithophore to ocean warming and acidification


Autoria(s): Schlüter, Lothar; Lohbeck, Kai T; Gutowska, Magdalena A; Gröger, Joachim P; Riebesell, Ulf; Reusch, Thorsten BH
Data(s)

28/08/2014

Resumo

Although oceanwarming and acidification are recognized as two major anthropogenic perturbations of today's oceanswe know very little about how marine phytoplankton may respond via evolutionary change.We tested for adaptation to ocean warming in combination with ocean acidification in the globally important phytoplankton species Emiliania huxleyi. Temperature adaptation occurred independently of ocean acidifcation levels. Exponential growth rates were were up to 16% higher in populations adapted for one year to warming when assayed at their upper thermal tolerance limit. Particulate inorganic (PIC) and organic (POC) carbon production was restored to values under present-day ocean conditions, owing to adaptive evolution, and were 101% and 55% higher under combined warming and acidification, respectively, than in non-adapted controls. Cells also evolved to a smaller size while they recovered their initial PIC:POC ratio even under elevated CO2. The observed changes in coccolithophore growth, calcite and biomass production, cell size and elemental composition demonstrate the importance of evolutionary processes for phytoplankton performance in a future ocean. At the end of a 1-yr temperature selection phase, we conducted a reciprocal assay experiment in which temperature-adapted asexual populations were compared to the respective non-adapted control populations under high temperature, and vice versa (1. Assay Data, Dataset #835336). Mean exponential growth rates ? in treatments subjected to high temperature increased rapidly under all high temperature-CO2 treatment combinations during the temperature selection phase (2. time series, Dataset #835339).

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.835341

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.835341

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Schlüter, Lothar; Lohbeck, Kai T; Gutowska, Magdalena A; Gröger, Joachim P; Riebesell, Ulf; Reusch, Thorsten BH (2014): Adaptation of a globally important coccolithophore to ocean warming and acidification. Nature Climate Change, doi:10.1038/NCLIMATE2379

Palavras-Chave #µ; Alkalinity, total; assay condition; AT; at day 5; BIOACID; Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification; C/N; calculated average; Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Carbon, inorganic, particulate, per cell; Carbon, organic, particulate, per cell; Carbon/Nitrogen ratio; Carbon dioxide, partial pressure; Cell biovol; Cell biovolume; cell diameter calcified; cell diameter decalcified; Cell size; cell volume decalcified; DIC; Evolution to CO2 and warming sequential =1, simult=2; Exp day; Experimental treatment; Experiment day; exponential growth rate; Exp trtm; Growth rate; measured average; Nitrogen, organic, particulate, per cell; Particulate inorganic carbon/particulate organic carbon ratio; Particulate inorganic carbon production per cell; Particulate organic carbon production per cell; pCO2; pH; PIC/cell; PIC/POC ratio; PIC prod; POC; POC prod; PON; Replicate; Sal; Salinity; selection condition; Species; Temp; Temperature, water
Tipo

Dataset