The effects of temperature increases on a temperate phytoplankton community — A mesocosm climate change scenario
Prior to the spring bloom in 2003 and 2004, batch temperature experiments of approximately 3 weeks' duration were carried out in land-based mesocosms in at the Espeland field station (Norway), with temperatures on average increased ~ 2.7–3 °C (T1) and ~ 5.2–5.6 °C (T2) above in situ fjord tempe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology 2010-01, Vol.383 (1), p.79-88 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Prior to the spring bloom in 2003 and 2004, batch temperature experiments of approximately 3
weeks' duration were carried out in land-based mesocosms in at the Espeland field station (Norway), with temperatures on average increased ~
2.7–3
°C (T1) and ~
5.2–5.6
°C (T2) above
in situ fjord temperature (RM). The development in the chlorophyll concentrations showed an earlier bloom as a response to increased temperatures but the carbon biomass showed that the warmest treatment yielded the lowest biomass. This study indicates that a part of the relationship between temperature and spring bloom timing stems from a temperature-induced change in phytoplankton algal physiology (the efficiency of photosystem II,
F
v/
F
m, and growth rates,
µ
max), i.e. a direct temperature effect. Data analysis performed on microscope identified and quantified species did not show a significant temperature influence on phytoplankton community composition. However, the HPLC data indicated that temperature changes of as little as 3
°C influence the community composition. In particular, these data showed that peridinin-containing dinoflagellates only increased in abundance in the heated mesocosms and that a prasinophycean bloom, which was undetected in the microscope analyses, occurred prior to the blooms of all other phytoplankton classes in all treatments. The microscope analyses did reveal a temperature effect on individual species distribution patterns.
Thalassionema nitzschioides was more abundant in the warm treatments and, in the warmest treatment, the spring bloom forming
Skeletonema marinoi comprised a smaller proportion of the diatom community than in the other treatments. |
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ISSN: | 0022-0981 1879-1697 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jembe.2009.10.014 |