Temperature fluctuation attenuates the effects of warming in estuarine microbial plankton communities
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Jabalera Cabrerizo, Marco; Marañón, Emilio; Fernández-González, Cristina; Alonso-Núñez, Adrián; Larsson, Henrik; Aranguren-Gassis, MaríaEditorial
Frontiers in Marine Science
Materia
Coastal ecosystems Diversity Interacting effects
Fecha
2021-04-09Referencia bibliográfica
Cabrerizo MJ, Marañón E, Fernández-González C, Alonso-Núñez A, Larsson H and Aranguren-Gassis M (2021) Temperature Fluctuation Attenuates the Effects of Warming in Estuarine Microbial Plankton Communities. Front. Mar. Sci. 8:656282. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2021.656282
Patrocinador
European Union’s Horizon 2020, AQUACOSM project; TRIATLAS, 731065; Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades, POLARIS, PGC2018-094553-B-I00; Juan de la Cierva-Formación, FJCI2017-32318, ICJ2019-040850-I; Xunta de Galicia, ED481-2017/342Resumen
Sea surface warming has the potential to alter the diversity, trophic organization and
productivity of marine communities. However, it is unknown if temperature fluctuations
that ecosystems naturally experience can alter the predicted impacts of warming.
We address this uncertainty by exposing a natural marine plankton community to
warming conditions (C3◦C) under a constant vs. fluctuating (±3◦C) temperature regime
using an experimental mesocosm approach. We evaluated changes in stoichiometry,
biomass, nutrient uptake, taxonomic composition, species richness and diversity,
photosynthetic performance, and community metabolic balance. Overall, warming had
a stronger impact than fluctuating temperature on all biological organization levels
considered. As the ecological succession progressed toward post-bloom, the effects of
warming on phytoplankton biomass, species richness, and net community productivity
intensified, likely due to a stimulated microzooplankton grazing, and the community
metabolic balance shifted toward a CO2 source. However, fluctuating temperatures
reduced the negative effects of warming on photosynthetic performance and net
community productivity by 40%. Our results demonstrate that temperature fluctuations
may temper the negative effect of warming on marine net productivity. These findings
highlight the need to consider short-term thermal fluctuations in experimental and
modeling approaches because the use of constant warming conditions could lead to an
overestimation of the real magnitude of climate change impacts on marine ecosystems.





