4.8 Article

Temperature variability interacts with mean temperature to influence the predictability of microbial phenotypes

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 19, Pages 5741-5754

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16330

Keywords

climate impact; climate variability; dinoflagellate; primary productivity

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP140101340, DP180100054]
  2. University of Technology Sydney Distinguished Visiting Professor Scheme
  3. U.S. National Science Foundation [OCE 1851222, OCE 1638804]
  4. University of Technology Sydney

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Tropical taxa may be vulnerable to temperature variations due to their relatively stable temperatures, and microbial responses to temperature fluctuations vary depending on their thermal history. This study highlights the divergent effects of temperature fluctuations on microbial growth and metabolism.
Despite their relatively high thermal optima (T-opt), tropical taxa may be particularly vulnerable to a rising baseline and increased temperature variation because they live in relatively stable temperatures closer to their T-opt. We examined how microbial eukaryotes with differing thermal histories responded to temperature fluctuations of different amplitudes (0 control, +/- 2, +/- 4 degrees C) around mean temperatures below or above their T-opt. Cosmopolitan dinoflagellates were selected based on their distinct thermal traits and included two species of the same genus (tropical and temperate Coolia spp.), and two strains of the same species maintained at different temperatures for >500 generations (tropical Amphidinium massartii control temperature and high temperature, CT and HT, respectively). There was a universal decline in population growth rate under temperature fluctuations, but strains with narrower thermal niche breadth (temperate Coolia and HT) showed similar to 10% greater reduction in growth. At suboptimal mean temperatures, cells in the cool phase of the fluctuation stopped dividing, fixed less carbon (C) and had enlarged cell volumes that scaled positively with elemental C, N, and P and C:Chlorophyll-a. However, at a supra-optimal mean temperature, fixed C was directed away from cell division and novel trait combinations developed, leading to greater phenotypic diversity. At the molecular level, heat-shock proteins, and chaperones, in addition to transcripts involving genome rearrangements, were upregulated in CT and HT during the warm phase of the supra-optimal fluctuation (30 +/- 4 degrees C), a stress response indicating protection. In contrast, the tropical Coolia species upregulated major energy pathways in the warm phase of its supra-optimal fluctuation (25 +/- 4 degrees C), indicating a broadscale shift in metabolism. Our results demonstrate divergent effects between taxa and that temporal variability in environmental conditions interacts with changes in the thermal mean to mediate microbial responses to global change, with implications for biogeochemical cycling.

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