Future warming stimulates growth and photosynthesis in an Arctic microalga more strongly than changes in light intensity or pCO2

Author:

Rokitta Sebastian D.1ORCID,Grossmann Christian H.1,Werner Elisa1,Moye Jannika1,Castellani Giulia2ORCID,Nöthig Eva‐Maria2ORCID,Rost Björn13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Marine Biogeosciences Division Alfred‐Wegener‐Institute – Helmholtz‐Centre for Polar and Marine Research Bremerhaven Deutschland

2. Polar Biological Oceanography Division Alfred‐Wegener‐Institute – Helmholtz‐Centre for Polar and Marine Research Am Handelshafen 12 Bremerhaven 27570 Bremen Deutschland

3. Faculty of Biology/Chemistry Universität Bremen Bremen Germany

Abstract

AbstractWe assessed the responses of solitary cells of Arctic Phaeocystis pouchetii grown under a matrix of temperature (2°C vs. 6°C), light intensity (55 vs. 160 μmol photons m−2 s−1) and pCO2 (400 vs. 1000 μatm CO2, i.e., 40.5 vs. 101.3 Pa). Next to acclimation parameters (growth rates, particulate and dissolved organic C and N, Chlorophyll a content), we measured physiological processes in vivo (electron transport rates and net photosynthesis) using fast‐repetition rate fluorometry and membrane‐inlet mass spectrometry. Within the applied driver ranges, elevated temperature had the most pronounced impacts, significantly increasing growth, elemental quotas and photosynthetic performance. Light stimulations manifested more prominently under 6°C, underlining temperature's role as a “master‐variable”. pCO2 was the least effective driver, exerting mostly insignificant effects. The obtained data were used for a simplistic upscaling simulation to investigate potential changes in P. pouchetii's bloom dynamics in the Fram Strait with increasing temperatures over the 21st century. Although solitary cells might not be fully representative of colonial cells commonly observed in the field, our results suggest that global warming accelerates bloom dynamics, with earlier onsets of blooms and higher peak biomasses. Such a temperature‐induced acceleration in the phenology of Phaeocystis and likely other Arctic phytoplankton might cause temporal mismatches, e.g., with the development of grazers, and therefore substantially affect the biogeochemistry and ecology of the Arctic.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Oceanography

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