4.4 Article

Physiological performance of the red alga Stylonema alsidii (Stylonematophyceae) under varying salinities

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY
Volume 460, Issue -, Pages 170-176

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jembe.2014.07.007

Keywords

Chlorophyll fluorescence; Ecotypic differentiation; Low molecular weight carbohydrates; NPQ; Osmotic acclimation; Red alga

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG EG 151/1-2]

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Stylonema alsidii is a non-florideophycean red alga of a simple morphology and has recently classified as cosmopolitan, suggesting a pronounced physiological ability to successfully colonise new coastal habitats. As for most non-florideophycean red algae, understanding of the general ecology and physiology of this species is, to date, limited. Here, we reports. alsidii from the low-salinity Baltic Sea (habitat salinity: similar to 25 S-A) for the first time. We compared its salinity stress response with that of a marine isolate (habitat salinity: similar to 35 S-A) by measuring growth, chlorophyll a (chl a) fluorescence responses, photo-protection capabilities (via NPQ) and low molecular weight carbohydrates (LMWCs) under hypo- and hypersaline conditions. S. alsidii appeared to be a euryhaline species; either isolate grew in a wide salinity range from 5 to 60 S-A and exhibited a growth maximum at full marine 33 S-A. In the marine S. alsidii, the maximum photosystem II (PSII) efficiency (F-v/F-m), the light saturation coefficient of photosynthesis (E-k) and NPQ mechanism were maximal at a full marine salinity, but reduced after exposure to hypo- and hypersaline stress. By contrast, PSII functioning and NPQ mechanisms of the Baltic isolate remained enhanced at low salinities and, thus, reflected an optimised physiological performance at local salinity regimes. However, the results may not allow a differentiation of salinity ecotypes and isolate-specific salinity stress responses could be a result of phenotypic plasticity. The heteroside digeneaside and the polyol sorbitol were the only detectable LMWCs in S. alsidii. In contrast to digeneaside, sorbitol appeared to be involved in processes of osmotic acclimation; this polyol was accumulated with increasing salinities by a factor of 5 (marine isolate) to 10 (Baltic isolate) and, thus, probably functions as organic osmolyte. Euryhaline growth and photosynthesis due to pronounced photo-protective capabilities and the regulation of sorbitol enables S. alsidii to colonise habitats exhibiting large salinity fluctuations (intertidal zones) and along salinity gradients (Baltic Sea) and, thus, can contribute to the wide distribution of this species. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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