Literature DB >> 29901841

Thermal niche evolution of functional traits in a tropical marine phototroph.

Kirralee G Baker1, Dale T Radford1, Christian Evenhuis1, Unnikrishnan Kuzhiumparam1, Peter J Ralph1, Martina A Doblin1.   

Abstract

Land-based plants and ocean-dwelling microbial phototrophs known as phytoplankton, are together responsible for almost all global primary production. Habitat warming associated with anthropogenic climate change has detrimentally impacted marine primary production, with the effects observed on regional and global scales. In contrast to slower-growing higher plants, there is considerable potential for phytoplankton to evolve rapidly with changing environmental conditions. The energetic constraints associated with adaptation in phytoplankton are not yet understood, but are central to forecasting how global biogeochemical cycles respond to contemporary ocean change. Here, we demonstrate a number of potential trade-offs associated with high-temperature adaptation in a tropical microbial eukaryote, Amphidinium massartii (dinoflagellate). Most notably, the population became high-temperature specialized (higher fitness within a narrower thermal envelope and higher thermal optimum), and had a greater nutrient requirement for carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. Evidently, the energetic constraints associated with living at elevated temperature alter competiveness along other environmental gradients. While high-temperature adaptation led to an irreversible change in biochemical composition (i.e., an increase in fatty acid saturation), the mechanisms underpinning thermal evolution in phytoplankton remain unclear, and will be crucial to understanding whether the trade-offs observed here are species-specific or are representative of the evolutionary constraints in all phytoplankton.
© 2018 Phycological Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adaptation; global warming; phytoplankton; thermal niche; thermal performance curves

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29901841     DOI: 10.1111/jpy.12759

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phycol        ISSN: 0022-3646            Impact factor:   2.923


  4 in total

1.  Experimental evolution of phytoplankton fatty acid thermal reaction norms.

Authors:  Daniel R O'Donnell; Zhi-Yan Du; Elena Litchman
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2019-04-23       Impact factor: 5.183

2.  Marine phytoplankton functional types exhibit diverse responses to thermal change.

Authors:  S I Anderson; A D Barton; S Clayton; S Dutkiewicz; T A Rynearson
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-11-05       Impact factor: 14.919

Review 3.  The ongoing need for rates: can physiology and omics come together to co-design the measurements needed to understand complex ocean biogeochemistry?

Authors:  Robert F Strzepek; Brook L Nunn; Lennart T Bach; John A Berges; Erica B Young; Philip W Boyd
Journal:  J Plankton Res       Date:  2022-06-08       Impact factor: 2.473

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

Authors:  Fei-Xue Fu; Bernhard Tschitschko; David A Hutchins; Michaela E Larsson; Kirralee G Baker; Allison McInnes; Tim Kahlke; Arjun Verma; Shauna A Murray; Martina A Doblin
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 13.211

  4 in total

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