4.7 Article

Seasonal Acclimation Modulates the Impacts of Simulated Warming and Light Reduction on Temperate Seagrass Productivity and Biochemical Composition

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.731152

Keywords

seasonal acclimatization; temperature; irradiance; fatty acids; nutritional composition; Ireland; Zostera marina; reproductive effort

Funding

  1. College of Science (NUI Galway) Scholarship
  2. VOCAB project - Marine Institute under the Marine Research Programme by the Irish Government [PBA/ME/16/01]

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Increases in seawater temperature and reduction in light quality pose significant threats to marine coastal communities, including seagrass ecosystems. Seasonal acclimatization plays a critical role in modulating productivity and biochemical responses of Zostera marina to environmental stressors such as warming and irradiance reduction, with different results observed across seasons and temperatures.
Increases in seawater temperature and reduction in light quality have emerged as some of the most important threats to marine coastal communities including seagrass ecosystems. Temperate seagrasses, including Zostera marina, typically have pronounced seasonal cycles which modulate seagrass growth, physiology and reproductive effort. These marked temporal patterns can affect experimental seagrass responses to climate change effects depending on the seasons of the year in which the experiments are conducted. This study aimed at evaluating how seasonal acclimatization modulates productivity and biochemical responses of Zostera marina to experimental warming and irradiance reduction. Seagrass shoots were exposed to different temperatures (6, 12, 16, 20, and 24 degrees C), combined with high (180 mu mol photons m(-2) s(-1)) and low (60 mu mol photons m(-2) s(-1)) light conditions across four seasons (spring: April, summer: July, and autumn: November 2015, and winter: January 2016). Plants exhibited similar temperature growth rates between 16 and 20 degrees C; at 24 degrees C, a drastic reduction in growth was observed; this was more accentuated in colder months and under low irradiance conditions. Higher leaf growth rates occurred in winter while the largest rhizomes were reached in experiments conducted in spring and summer. Increases in temperature induced a significant reduction in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), particularly omega-3 (n-3 PUFA). Our results highlight that temperate seagrass populations currently living under temperature limitation will be favored by future increases in sea surface temperature in terms of leaf and rhizome productivity. Together with results from this study on Z. marina from a temperate region, a wider review of the reported impacts of experimental warming indicates the likely reduction in some compounds of nutritional importance for higher trophic levels in seagrass leaves. Our results further demonstrate that data derived from laboratory-based studies investigating environmental stress on seagrass growth and acclimation, and their subsequent interpretation, are strongly influenced by seasonality and in situ conditions that precede any experimental exposure.

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