4.8 Article

Acclimation of bloom-forming and perennial seaweeds to elevated pCO2 conserved across levels of environmental complexity

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 11, Pages 4828-4839

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13701

Keywords

acclimation; CO2; environmental complexity; growth; photosynthesis; respiration; seaweed

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41676145]
  2. AoShan Talents Program [2015ASTPES03]
  3. Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology
  4. Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars of Shandong Province [JQ201509]
  5. Program of Leading Talents of Qingdao [13-CX-27]
  6. Talent Projects of Distinguished Scientific Scholars in Agriculture, Hi-Tech Research and Development Program (863) of China [2014AA022003]
  7. National Science & Technology Pillar Program [2013BAD23B01]
  8. National Basic Research Special Foundation of China [2013FY110700]

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Macroalgae contribute approximately 15% of the primary productivity in coastal marine ecosystems, fix up to 27.4 Tg of carbon per year, and provide important structural components for life in coastal waters. Despite this ecological and commercial importance, direct measurements and comparisons of the short-term responses to elevated pCO(2) in seaweeds with different life-history strategies are scarce. Here, we cultured several seaweed species (bloom forming/nonbloom forming/perennial/annual) in the laboratory, in tanks in an indoor mesocosm facility, and in coastal mesocosms under pCO(2) levels ranging from 400 to 2,000 mu atm. We find that, across all scales of the experimental setup, ephemeral species of the genus Ulva increase their photosynthesis and growth rates in response to elevated pCO(2) the most, whereas longer-lived perennial species show a smaller increase or a decrease. These differences in short-term growth and photosynthesis rates are likely to give bloom-forming green seaweeds a competitive advantage in mixed communities, and our results thus suggest that coastal seaweed assemblages in eutrophic waters may undergo an initial shift toward communities dominated by bloom-forming, short-lived seaweeds.

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