Seasonal interactive effects of pCO(2) and irradiance on the ecophysiology of brown macroalga Fucus vesiculosus L.

Stochastic upwelling of seawater in the Baltic Sea from the deep, anoxic bottoms may bring low-pH water rich in CO2 close to the surface. Such events may become more frequent with climate change and ongoing ocean acidification (OA). Photoautotrophs, such as macroalgae, which are important foundation...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European Journal of Phycology
Main Authors: Takolander, Antti, Cabeza, Mar, Leskinen, Elina
Other Authors: Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS), Marine Ecosystems Research Group, Tvärminne Zoological Station, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Mar Cabeza-Jaimejuan / Principal Investigator, Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, Ecosystems and Environment Research Programme, Global Change and Conservation Lab
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2020
Subjects:
CO2
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/314482
Description
Summary:Stochastic upwelling of seawater in the Baltic Sea from the deep, anoxic bottoms may bring low-pH water rich in CO2 close to the surface. Such events may become more frequent with climate change and ongoing ocean acidification (OA). Photoautotrophs, such as macroalgae, which are important foundation species, have been proposed to benefit from increased carbon availability due to reduced energetic cost in carbon acquisition. However, the exact effects of CO2 fertilization may depend on the ambient light environment, as photosynthesis rates depend on available irradiance. In this experimental study, interacting effects of CO2 addition and irradiance on the habitat-forming macroalga Fucus vesiculosus were investigated during two seasons - winter and summer - in the northern Baltic Sea. Growth rates remained unaffected by CO2 or irradiance during both seasons, suggesting that direct effects of elevated CO2 on mature F. vesiculosus are small. Increases in CO2 affected algal elemental ratios by increasing carbon and decreasing nitrogen content, with resulting changes in the C:N ratio, but only in winter. In summer, chlorophyll a content increased under low irradiance. Increases in CO2 caused a decline in light-harvesting efficiency (decrease in F-v/F-m and alpha) under high irradiance in summer, and conversely increased alpha under low irradiance. High irradiance caused increases in the maximum relative electron transport rate (rETR(max)) in summer, but not in winter. Differences between winter and summer indicate that F. vesiculosus responses to CO2 and irradiance are season-specific. Increases in carbon content during winter could indicate slightly positive effects of CO2 addition in the long run if the extra carbon gained may be capitalized in growth. The results of this study suggest that increases in CO2, either through upwelling or OA, may have positive effects on F. vesiculosus, but these effects are probably small. Peer reviewed