A Warmer Arctic Compromises Winter Survival of Habitat-Forming Seaweeds
Continuous winter darkness at a latitude of 79°N was simulated in cultures of four species of Arctic seaweeds at 3 and 8°C. The laminarians Saccharina latissima and Alaria esculenta , and the rhodophytes Phycodrys rubens and Ptilota gunneri were monitored for 4 months in total darkness and after 1 w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Frontiers in Marine Science 2022-01, Vol.8 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Continuous winter darkness at a latitude of 79°N was simulated in cultures of four species of Arctic seaweeds at 3 and 8°C. The laminarians
Saccharina latissima
and
Alaria esculenta
, and the rhodophytes
Phycodrys rubens
and
Ptilota gunneri
were monitored for 4 months in total darkness and after 1 week following light return in early spring, under controlled laboratory conditions. Biomass loss during darkness was enhanced by the high temperature in all species. At 8°C, the two laminarians were unable to resume growth upon re-illumination.
Alaria esculenta
showed new blade production by the end of the dark period, but only at 3°C. In all species, the photosynthetic ability was sustained, not suspended, during the whole dark period.
P. rubens
exhibited lower photosynthetic potential at 8°C than at 3°C during the darkness period, but it was able to recover its O
2
evolving potential upon re-illumination, as
P. gunneri
and
S. latissima
did, but the latter only at 3°C. The reactivation of photosynthesis seemed to involve photosystem II over photosystem I, as 7 d of photoperiod after the prolonged darkness was not enough to fully recover the PAM-related photosynthetic parameters. Only small changes were recorded in the internal chemical composition (total C, total N, carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids), but species-specific differences were observed. Unlike subarctic areas with an operating photoperiod along the year, a warmer polar night might pose a limit to the ability of multi-year seaweeds to occupy the new ice-free illuminated areas of the Arctic coasts, so that newcomers will potentially be restricted to the spring-summer season. |
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ISSN: | 2296-7745 2296-7745 |
DOI: | 10.3389/fmars.2021.750209 |