Photoacclimation to Long‐Term Ultraviolet Radiation Exposure of Natural Sub‐Antarctic Phytoplankton Communities: Fixed Surface Incubations Versus Mixed Mesocosms

ABSTRACT Solar UVB radiation (280–320 nm) is known to have detrimental effects on marine phytoplankton. Associated with the seasonal ozone hole in Antarctica, stratospheric ozone depletion occasionally influences the sub‐Antarctic (Beagle Channel, Argentina) region, enhancing levels of UVB. The prim...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Photochemistry and Photobiology
Main Authors: Hernando, Marcelo, Schloss, Irene, Roy, Suzanne, Ferreyra, Gustavo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2006
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1562/2005-08-29-ra-662
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1562%2F2005-08-29-RA-662
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1562/2005-08-29-RA-662
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Summary:ABSTRACT Solar UVB radiation (280–320 nm) is known to have detrimental effects on marine phytoplankton. Associated with the seasonal ozone hole in Antarctica, stratospheric ozone depletion occasionally influences the sub‐Antarctic (Beagle Channel, Argentina) region, enhancing levels of UVB. The primary objective of this work was to study the effects of several ( i.e. 6–10) days of exposure to UVB on the taxonomic composition and photosynthetic inhibition of local phytoplankton communities. For different light treatments, fixed‐depth incubations placed in an outdoors water tank were compared with incubations in 1900 L mesocosms, where vertical mixing was present. Phytoplankton growth was inhibited by UV radiation (UVR) in fixed‐depth experiments but not in the mixed mesocosms. Under fixed and mixed conditions alike, photosynthesis was significantly inhibited by UVB at the beginning of the experiment but no longer after several days of exposure, suggesting that cells had acclimated to radiation conditions. There was a change in species composition in response to UVR exposure in both experiments, which likely explained acclimation. In the community exposed to fixed conditions this change was from a phytoflagellate‐dominated assemblage to a community with high relative abundance of diatoms after 6 days of exposure. UVA was responsible for most of the observed growth inhibition; however, the reduction in photosynthesis was produced by UVB. The reasons behind this variability in responses to UVR are associated with species‐specific sensitivity and acclimation, and the previous light history of cells. In the community exposed in mesocosms, an assemblage codominated by phytoflagellates and diatoms was observed at the beginning of the experiments. After 10 days of exposure, green algae ( Eutreptiella sp) had increased, and phytoflagellates were the dominant group. The synthesis of mycosporine‐like amino acids (MAAs), antioxidant enzymes and photosynthetic antenna pigments, in relation to repair and protection processes, ...