North Atlantic Oscillation drives the annual occurrence of an isolated, peripheral population of the brown seaweed Fucus guiryi in the Western Mediterranean Sea

The canopy-forming, intertidal brown (Phaeophyceae) seaweed Fucus guiryi is distributed along the cold-temperate and warm-temperate coasts of Europe and North Africa. Curiously, an isolated population develops at Punta Calaburras (Alboran Sea, Western Mediterranean) but thalli are not present in mid...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:PeerJ
Main Authors: Melero-Jiménez, Ignacio José, Salvo-Tierra, Ángel Enrique, Báez Barrionuevo, José Carlos, Bañares-España, Elena, Reul, Andreas, Flores-Moya, Antonio
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10630/16919
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4048
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Summary:The canopy-forming, intertidal brown (Phaeophyceae) seaweed Fucus guiryi is distributed along the cold-temperate and warm-temperate coasts of Europe and North Africa. Curiously, an isolated population develops at Punta Calaburras (Alboran Sea, Western Mediterranean) but thalli are not present in midsummer every year, unlike the closest (ca. 80 km), perennial populations at the Strait of Gibraltar. The persistence of the alga at Punta Calaburras could be due to the growth of resilient, microscopic stages as well as the arrival of few-celled stages originating from neighbouring localities, and transported by the permanent Atlantic Jet flowing from the Atlantic Ocean into the Mediterranean. A twenty-six year time series (from 1990 to 2015) of midsummer occurrence of F. guiryi thalli at Punta Calaburras has been analysed by correlating with oceanographic (sea surface temperature, an estimator of the Atlantic Jet power) and climatic factors (air temperature, rainfall, and North Atlantic Oscillation -NAO-, and Arctic Oscillation -AO- indexes). Binary logistic regression showed that the occurrence of thalli at Punta Calaburras in midsummer is favoured under positive NAO index from April to June. Although significant differences were detected in photosynthetic quantum yield and water loss under emersion conditions, with thalli from Punta Calaburras being more affected by emersion than those from Tarifa, the developmental instability showed that the population from Tarifa suffers higher stress during ontogeny than that from Punta Calaburras. In conclusion, this study demonstrates the teleconnection between atmospheric oscillations and survival and proliferation of marine macroalgae. This work was supported by the project ``Variabilidad funcional y dinámica de las respuestas al cambio climático de bosques marinos (MARFOR)'' from the Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad, (Acciones de Programación Conjunta Internacional, PCIN-2016-090). Universidad de Málaga. Campus internacional de excelencia. Andalucia ...