Seawater carbonate chemistry and growth rate of Emiliania huxleyi in lab experiment


Autoria(s): Lohbeck, Kai T; Riebesell, Ulf; Collins, Sinéad; Reusch, Thorsten BH
Data(s)

28/11/2012

Resumo

Predicting the impacts of environmental change on marine organisms, food webs, and biogeochemical cycles presently relies almost exclusively on short-term physiological studies, while the possibility of adaptive evolution is often ignored. Here, we assess adaptive evolution in the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi, a well-established model species in biological oceanography, in response to ocean acidification. We previously demonstrated that this globally important marine phytoplankton species adapts within 500 generations to elevated CO2. After 750 and 1000 generations, no further fitness increase occurred, and we observed phenotypic convergence between replicate populations. We then exposed adapted populations to two novel environments to investigate whether or not the underlying basis for high CO2-adaptation involves functional genetic divergence, assuming that different novel mutations become apparent via divergent pleiotropic effects. The novel environment "high light" did not reveal such genetic divergence whereas growth in a low-salinity environment revealed strong pleiotropic effects in high CO2 adapted populations, indicating divergent genetic bases for adaptation to high CO2. This suggests that pleiotropy plays an important role in adaptation of natural E. huxleyi populations to ocean acidification. Our study highlights the potential mutual benefits for oceanography and evolutionary biology of using ecologically important marine phytoplankton for microbial evolution experiments.

Formato

text/tab-separated-values, 4800 data points

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.823153

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.823153

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Relação

Lavigne, Héloise; Gattuso, Jean-Pierre (2011): seacarb: seawater carbonate chemistry with R. R package version 2.4. https://cran.r-project.org/package=seacarb

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Lohbeck, Kai T; Riebesell, Ulf; Collins, Sinéad; Reusch, Thorsten BH (2013): Functional genetic divergence in high CO2 adapted Emiliania Huxleyi populations. Evolution, 67(7), 1892-1900, doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.2012.01812.x

Palavras-Chave #adaptation; Alkalinity, total; Aragonite saturation state; Bicarbonate ion; BIOACID; Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification; Calcite saturation state; Calculated using CO2SYS; Calculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. (2010); Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Carbonate ion; Carbonate system computation flag; Carbon dioxide; Fugacity of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air); Generation; Growth rate; laboratory; light; molecular biology; multiple factors; North Atlantic; OA-ICC; Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre; other process; Partial pressure of carbon dioxide (water) at sea surface temperature (wet air); pH; phytoplankton; Population; Potentiometric titration; Replicates; salinity; Salinity; Species; Temperature, water; Treatment
Tipo

Dataset