Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea)

The key species of many temperate and Arctic kelp forests are strongly constricted in their vertical and latitudinal distribution by their tolerance to UV radiation and by their temperature demands. The stages in the life history of seaweeds most sucseptible to environmental perturbaties are their u...

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Main Authors: Müller, Ruth, Wiencke, Christian, Bischof, Kai
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/17316/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.31151
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spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:17316 2023-05-15T14:24:20+02:00 Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea) Müller, Ruth Wiencke, Christian Bischof, Kai 2007 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/17316/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.31151 unknown Müller, R. , Wiencke, C. and Bischof, K. (2007) Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea) , Botanikertagung 2007, Hamburg.-07.09.2007. . hdl:10013/epic.31151 EPIC3Botanikertagung 2007, Hamburg.-07.09.2007., 03 Conference notRev 2007 ftawi 2021-12-24T15:32:04Z The key species of many temperate and Arctic kelp forests are strongly constricted in their vertical and latitudinal distribution by their tolerance to UV radiation and by their temperature demands. The stages in the life history of seaweeds most sucseptible to environmental perturbaties are their unicellular propagation units. Therefore we determined the temperature- dependent UV- susceptibility of zoospores of Saccharina latissima and Laminaria digitata from the Arctic (Spitsbergen) as well as from temperate waters (Helgoland), of Arctic Alaria esculenta and of temperate L. hyperborea. The zoospores were exposed to three radiation conditions (photosynthetic active radiation PAR, PAR + UV A radiation or PAR + UV A + UV B radiation) and four temperatures (2, 7, 12, 18 °C). Subsequently the germination rates were assessed. Under elevated water temperatures the tolerance of zoospores of A. esculenta, S. latissima and L. hyperborea to UV B- stress were not changed. Laminaria digitata from the Arctic, however, improved its UV-tolerance with increasing temperature. Zoospores of the summer reproducing L. digitata from Helgoland reached under the whole light spectrum their sublethal limit at 18 °C, a temperature often recorded in summer at Helgoland today. So in the Arctic the upper distribution limit of L. digitata will increase with rising temperatures and in the North Sea the southern distribution boundary of this species will be shifted north. This shows the considerable effect global change has on seaweed distribution. Conference Object Arctic Arctic Climate change Spitsbergen Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center) Arctic Helgoland
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description The key species of many temperate and Arctic kelp forests are strongly constricted in their vertical and latitudinal distribution by their tolerance to UV radiation and by their temperature demands. The stages in the life history of seaweeds most sucseptible to environmental perturbaties are their unicellular propagation units. Therefore we determined the temperature- dependent UV- susceptibility of zoospores of Saccharina latissima and Laminaria digitata from the Arctic (Spitsbergen) as well as from temperate waters (Helgoland), of Arctic Alaria esculenta and of temperate L. hyperborea. The zoospores were exposed to three radiation conditions (photosynthetic active radiation PAR, PAR + UV A radiation or PAR + UV A + UV B radiation) and four temperatures (2, 7, 12, 18 °C). Subsequently the germination rates were assessed. Under elevated water temperatures the tolerance of zoospores of A. esculenta, S. latissima and L. hyperborea to UV B- stress were not changed. Laminaria digitata from the Arctic, however, improved its UV-tolerance with increasing temperature. Zoospores of the summer reproducing L. digitata from Helgoland reached under the whole light spectrum their sublethal limit at 18 °C, a temperature often recorded in summer at Helgoland today. So in the Arctic the upper distribution limit of L. digitata will increase with rising temperatures and in the North Sea the southern distribution boundary of this species will be shifted north. This shows the considerable effect global change has on seaweed distribution.
format Conference Object
author Müller, Ruth
Wiencke, Christian
Bischof, Kai
spellingShingle Müller, Ruth
Wiencke, Christian
Bischof, Kai
Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea)
author_facet Müller, Ruth
Wiencke, Christian
Bischof, Kai
author_sort Müller, Ruth
title Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea)
title_short Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea)
title_full Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea)
title_fullStr Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea)
title_full_unstemmed Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea)
title_sort effects of global climate change on microstages of laminariales from helgoland (north sea) and spitsbergen (arctic sea)
publishDate 2007
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/17316/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.31151
geographic Arctic
Helgoland
geographic_facet Arctic
Helgoland
genre Arctic
Arctic
Climate change
Spitsbergen
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Climate change
Spitsbergen
op_source EPIC3Botanikertagung 2007, Hamburg.-07.09.2007., 03
op_relation Müller, R. , Wiencke, C. and Bischof, K. (2007) Effects of global climate change on microstages of Laminariales from Helgoland (North Sea) and Spitsbergen (Arctic Sea) , Botanikertagung 2007, Hamburg.-07.09.2007. . hdl:10013/epic.31151
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