4.7 Article

Forecast climate change conditions sustain growth and physiology but hamper reproduction in range-margin populations of a foundation rockweed species

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 141, Issue -, Pages 205-213

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2018.09.014

Keywords

Range-margin populations; Macroalgae; Climate change; Salinity; Warming; Receptacles; Photosynthesis; Genetic variation; Adaptation

Funding

  1. BONUS BONUS
  2. EU joint Baltic Sea research and development programme [185]
  3. European Union
  4. Academy of Finland through project BAMBI - Baltic Sea Marine Biodiversity [273623]

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Intensifying environmental changes due to climate change affect marine species worldwide. Herein, we experimentally tested if the combination of forecasted warming and hyposalinity adversely affected growth, receptacle formation, and photosynthesis of three marginal populations of the brown alga Fucus from the northern Baltic Sea. Growth was not impaired by the projected consequences of climate change but genotypes varied in their responses, suggesting existence of genetic variation in phenotypic plasticity. Climate change further prevented receptacle formation, implying that Fucus fail to reproduce sexually. Photosynthesis was not affected by climate change but varied among populations. Our results show that Fucus populations photosynthesized, grew, and survived well under the projected climate change but their sexual reproduction ceased. This suggests that the marginal populations tested herein are resilient to future conditions but only if asexual reproduction enables them to proliferate.

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