The Baltic Sea spring phytoplankton bloom in a changing climate: an experimental approach

Title
The Baltic Sea spring phytoplankton bloom in a changing climate: an experimental approach

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Sommer U, Aberle N, Lengfellner K, Lewandowska A

Journal
Marine Biology

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Keywords

mesocosm, Kiel indoor, Kiel, Germany, spring bloom, Light, 1.4 m3

Abstract

The response of the Baltic Sea spring bloomwas studied in mesocosm experiments, where temperatureswere elevated up to 6 C above the present-day sea surfacetemperature of the spring bloom season. Four of the sevenexperiments were carried out at different light levels(32–202 Wh m-2 at the start of the experiments) in thedifferent experimental years. In one further experiment, thefactors light and temperature were crossed, and in oneexperiment, the factors density of overwintering zooplanktonand temperature were crossed. Overall, there was aslight temporal acceleration of the phytoplankton springbloom, a decline of peak biomass and a decline of mean cellsize with warming. The temperature influence on phytoplanktonbloom timing, biomass and size structure wasqualitatively highly robust across experiments. The dependenceof timing, biomass, and size structure on initialconditions was tested by multiple regression analysis of they-temperature regressions with the candidate independentvariables initial light, initial phytoplankton biomass, initialmicrozooplankton biomass, and initial mesozooplankton(=copepod) biomass. The bloom timing predicted for meantemperatures (5.28 C) depended on light. The peak biomassshowed a strong positive dependence on light and a weakernegative dependence on initial copepod density. Meanphytoplankton cell size predicted for the mean temperatureresponded positively to light and negatively to copepoddensity. The anticipated mismatch between phytoplanktonsupply and food demand by newly hatched copepod naupliioccurred only under the combination of low light and warmtemperatures. The analysis presented here confirms earlierconclusions about temperature responses that are based onsubsets of our experimental series. However, only thecomprehensive analysis across all experiments highlightsthe importance of the factor light.

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Effects of water temperature and mixed layer depth on zooplankton body size

Title
Effects of water temperature and mixed layer depth on zooplankton body size

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Sebastian P, Stibor H, Berger S, Diehl S

Journal
Marine Biology

Volume

Pagination
1-10

ISBN Number
0025-3162

Keywords

Lake Brunnsee, Germany, freshwater, 6.3m3

Abstract

Ecological consequences of global warming include shifts of species ranges toward higher altitudes and latitudes as well as temporal shifts in phenology and life-cycle events. Evidence is accumulating that increasing temperature is also linked to reduced body size of ectotherms. While temperature can act directly on body size, it may also act indirectly by affecting the timing of life-cycle events and the resulting population age and size structure, especially in seasonal environments. Population structure may, in turn, be influenced by temperature-driven changes in resource availability. In a field mesocosm experiment, we investigated how water temperature and mixed surface layer depth (a temperature-dependent determinant of light availability to phytoplankton) affected population dynamics, population age and size structure, and individual size at stage (size at first reproduction) of Daphnia hyalina during and after a phytoplankton spring bloom. Mixed layer depth was inversely related to the magnitudes of the phytoplankton spring bloom and the subsequent Daphnia peak, but had no effect on the body size of Daphnia . Conversely, temperature had no effects on abundance peaks but strongly affected the timing of these events. This resulted in at times positive, at other times negative, transient effects of temperature on mean body size, caused by asynchronous changes in population size structure in cold versus warm treatments. In contrast to mean body size, individual size at stage consistently decreased with increasing temperature. We suggest that size at stage could be used as an unbiased response parameter to temperature that is unaffected by transient, demographically driven changes in population size structure.

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Bacterioplankton groups involved in the uptake of phosphate and dissolved organic phosphorus in a mesocosm experiment with P-starved Mediterranean waters

Title
Bacterioplankton groups involved in the uptake of phosphate and dissolved organic phosphorus in a mesocosm experiment with P-starved Mediterranean waters

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Sebastián M, Pitta P, González JM, Thingstad TF, Gasol JM

Journal
Environmental Microbiology

Volume
14

Pagination
2334-2347

ISBN Number

Keywords

Bacteria, phosphate turnover time, oligitrophic, Mediterrranean, Crete, Greece, land-based, 3 m3

Abstract

The use of inorganic phosphate (Pi) and dissolvedorganic phosphorus (DOP) by different bacterialgroups was studied in experimental mesocosms ofP-starved eastern Mediterranean waters in theabsence (control mesocosms) and presence of additionalPi (P-amended mesocosms). The low Pi turnovertimes in the control mesocosms and theincrease in heterotrophic prokaryotic abundance andproduction upon Pi addition confirmed that the bacterialcommunity was originally P-limited. The bacterioplanktongroups taking up Pi and DOP wereidentified by means of microautoradiography combinedwith catalysed reporter deposition fluorescencein situ hybridization. Incubations with leucinewere also performed for comparative purposes. Allthe probe-identified groups showed a high percentageof cells taking up Pi and DOP in the control,P-limited, mesocosms throughout the experiment.However, in response to Pi addition two contrastingscenarios in Pi use were observed: (i) on day 1 ofthe experiment Pi addition caused a clear reductionin the percentage of SAR11 cells taking up Pi,whereas Gammaproteobacteria, Roseobacter andBacteroidetes showed similar percentages to theones in the control mesocosms and (ii) on day 4 of theexperiment, probably when the bacterial communityhad fully responded to the P input, all the probeidentifiedgroups showed low percentages of cellstaking up the substrate as compared with the controlmesocosms. These differences are likely related todifferent P requirements among the bacterial groupsand point out to the existence of two contrastingstrategies in P use.

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Phosphorus addition reverses the positive effect of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) on the toxic cyanobacterium, Microcystis aeruginosa

Title
Phosphorus addition reverses the positive effect of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) on the toxic cyanobacterium, Microcystis aeruginosa

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Sarnelle O, White JD, Horst GP, Hamilton SK

Journal
Water Research

Volume
46

Pagination
3471-3478

ISBN Number
0043-1354

Keywords

Microcystis, cyanobacteria, phosphorus, Dreissena polymorpha, eutrophication, Harmful algal bloom, HAB, grazing, Zebra mussel, blue-green-algae, low-nutrient lakes, hudson river, relative biomass, filtration-rate, great-lakes, new-york, phytoplankton, dominance, invasion, freshwater, California, USA, 25m3

Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) have positive effects on the toxin-producing cyanobacterium, Microcystis aeruginosa, at low phosphorus (P) concentrations, but negative effects on M. aeruginosa at high P, with a large-scale enclosure experiment in an oligotrophic lake. After three weeks, mussels had a significantly positive effect on M. aeruginosa at ambient P (total phosphorus, TP similar to 10 mu g L-1), and a significantly negative effect at high P (simulating a TP of similar to 40 mu g L-1 in lakes). Positive and negative effects were strong and very similar in magnitude. Thus, we were able to ameliorate a negative effect of Dreissena invasion on water quality (i.e., promotion of Microcystis) by adding P to water from an oligotrophic lake. Our results are congruent with many field observations of Microcystis response to Dreissena invasion across ecosystems of varying P availability. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Date of Published
Jul

Accession Number
WOS:000304850600003

Type of Article
Article

Alternate Journal
Water Res.

Warming does not always benefit the small – Results from a plankton experiment

Title
Warming does not always benefit the small – Results from a plankton experiment

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Ruger T, Sommer U

Journal
Aquatic Botany

Volume
97

Pagination
64-68

ISBN Number

Keywords

phytoplankton, cell size, temperature, mesocosm, Kiel indoor, 1.4 m3, Kiel, Germany

Abstract

The concern about climate change has re-vitalised the interest in the relationships between body-size oforganisms and temperature both at the intraspecific level (James’ rule, Temperature-Size-Rule) and at theinterspecific level (Bergmann’s rule). In order to test the expected shifts towards smaller body size underwarming conditions, a mesocosm experiment using plankton from the Baltic Sea at three temperaturelevels was performed in April 2010. The hypothesis was tested, that a tendency well established undermonoculture conditions, would also be found in phytoplankton embedded in a semi-natural food-web.Six out of seven phytoplankton species abundant enough for analysis did not show the expected shrinkageof cell volume with increasing temperature, while volume shrinkage of the 7th species (Eutreptiella sp.)could be attributed exclusively to the axis which is affected by cell division. Thus it could not be ruledout, that the populations grown at different temperature levels were just at a different stage of the cellcycle. Similarly, we could not find an indication for a replacement of larger species by smaller ones underhigher temperature. As a consequence, mean cell size did not respond to temperature. Therefore, wecould not support the hypothesis, that warming should benefit the small.

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Effect of increased pCO2 on bacterial assemblage shifts in response to glucose addition in Fram Strait seawater mesocosms

Title
Effect of increased pCO2 on bacterial assemblage shifts in response to glucose addition in Fram Strait seawater mesocosms

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Ray JL, Topper B, An S, Silyakova A, Spindelbock J, Thyrhaug R, DuBow MS, Thingstad TF, Sandaa RA

Journal
FEMS Microbiology Ecology

Volume

Pagination
1-11

ISBN Number

Keywords

glucose, pyrosequencing, acidification, Fram Strait, Bacteria, V1-V2 16S rDNA amplicon library, mesocosm, 1 m3, Arctic ocean

Abstract

Ocean acidification may stimulate primary production through increased availabilityof inorganic carbon in the photic zone, which may in turn change thebiogenic flux of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and the growth potential ofheterotrophic bacteria. To investigate the effects of ocean acidification on marinebacterial assemblages, a two-by-three factorial mescosom experiment wasconducted using surface sea water from the East Greenland Current in FramStrait. Pyrosequencing of the V1-V2 region of bacterial 16S ribosomal RNAgenes was used to investigate differences in the endpoint (Day 9) compositionof bacterial assemblages in mineral nutrient-replete mesocosms amended withglucose (0 lM, 5.3 lM and 15.9 lM) under ambient (250 latm) or acidified(400 latm) partial pressures of CO2 (pCO2). All mesocosms showed lowrichness and diversity by Chao1 estimator and Shannon index, respectively,with general dominance by Gammaproteobacteria and Flavobacteria. Nonmetricmultidimensional scaling analysis and two-way analysis of variance of theJaccard dissimilarity matrix (97% similarity cut-off) demonstrated that the significantcommunity shift between 0 lM and 15.9 lM glucose addition at250 latm pCO2 was eliminated at 400 latm pCO2. These results suggest thatthe response potential of marine bacteria to DOC input may be altered underacidified conditions.

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Diatom Derived Polyunsaturated Aldehydes Do Not Structure the Planktonic Microbial Community in a Mesocosm Study

Title
Diatom Derived Polyunsaturated Aldehydes Do Not Structure the Planktonic Microbial Community in a Mesocosm Study

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Paul C, Reunamo A, Lindehoff E, Bergkvist J, Mausz MA, Larsson H, Richter H, Wängberg SA, Leskinen P, Bamstedt U, Pohnert G

Journal
Marine Drugs

Volume
10

Pagination
775-792

ISBN Number

Keywords

mesocosm, plankton interactions, aldehydes, oxylipins, Umea, Sweden, indoor, 2 m3

Abstract

Several marine and freshwater diatoms produce polyunsaturated aldehydes(PUA) in wound-activated processes. These metabolites are also released by intact diatomcells during algal blooms. Due to their activity in laboratory experiments, PUA areconsidered as potential mediators of diatom-bacteria interactions. Here, we tested thehypothesis that PUA mediate such processes in a close-to-field mesocosm experiment.Natural plankton communities enriched with Skeletonema marinoi strains that differ intheir PUA production, a plankton control, and a plankton control supplemented with PUAat natural and elevated concentrations were observed. We monitored bacterial and viralabundance as well as bacterial community composition and did not observe any influenceof PUA on these parameters even at elevated concentrations. We rather detected analternation of the bacterial diversity over time and differences between the two S. marinoistrains, indicating unique dynamic bacterial communities in these algal blooms. Theseresults suggest that factors other than PUA are of significance for interactions betweendiatoms and bacteria.

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The response of marine picoplankton to ocean acidification

Title
The response of marine picoplankton to ocean acidification

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Newbold LK, Oliver AE, Booth T, Tiwari B, DeSantis T, Maguire M, Andersen G, Gast CJ, Whiteley AS

Journal
Environmental Microbiology

Volume
14

Pagination
2293-2307

ISBN Number

Keywords

picoplankton, picoeukaryotes, RubisCO, 11 m3, mesocosm, Bergen, Espegrend, Norway, acidification

Abstract

Since industrialization global CO2 emissions haveincreased, and as a consequence oceanic pH is predictedto drop by 0.3–0.4 units before the end ofthe century – a process coined ‘ocean acidification’.Consequently, there is significant interest in how pHchanges will affect the ocean’s biota and integralprocesses. We investigated marine picoplankton(0.2–2 mm diameter) community response to predictedend of century CO2 concentrations, via a ‘high-CO2’ (~ 750 ppm) large-volume (11 000 l) containedseawater mesocosm approach. We found little evidenceof changes occurring in bacterial abundance orcommunity composition due to elevated CO2 underboth phytoplankton pre-bloom/bloom and post-bloomconditions. In contrast, significant differences wereobserved between treatments for a number of keypicoeukaryote community members. These data suggesteda key outcome of ocean acidification is a morerapid exploitation of elevated CO2 levels by photosyntheticpicoeukaryotes. Thus, our study indicatesthe need for a more thorough understanding ofpicoeukaryote-mediated carbon flow within oceanacidification experiments, both in relation to picoplanktoncarbon sources, sinks and transfer to highertrophic levels.

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Combined effects of increased UV-B and temperature on the pigment-determined marine phytoplankton community of the St. Lawrence Estuary

Title
Combined effects of increased UV-B and temperature on the pigment-determined marine phytoplankton community of the St. Lawrence Estuary

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Lionard M, Roy S, Tremblay-Létourneau M, Ferreyra GA

Journal
Marine Ecology Progress Series

Volume
445

Pagination
219-234

ISBN Number

Keywords

mesocosm, Ultraviolet-B radiation, temperature, phytoplankton, global warming, St Lawrence, Quebec, Canada, 2 m3

Abstract

The combined effects of increased UV-B and temperature on natural marine phytoplanktonfrom the St. Lawrence Estuary (Canada) were examined in an 8 d mesocosm experimentcarried out in Rimouski (Québec, Canada) in August 2008. We tested the hypothesis that in -creased temperature (+3°C) will offset algal growth suppression by UV-B (78% UV-B increase)using duplicate mesocosm experiments containing natural phytoplankton assemblages. The re -sponse of the entire phytoplankton community, in terms of HPLC pigment-based phytoplanktonbio mass, community composition (CHEMTAX), xanthophyll cycles photoprotection and quantumyield of photosystem II (the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence: Fv/Fm), showed a significantinfluence of temperature (negative on small phytoplanktonic cells,

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Responses of primary productivity to increased temperature and phytoplankton diversity

Title
Responses of primary productivity to increased temperature and phytoplankton diversity

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2012

Authors

Lewandowska AM, Breithaupt P, Hillebrand H, Hoppe GH, Jurgens K, Sommer U

Journal
Journal of Sea Research

Volume
72

Pagination
87-93

ISBN Number

Keywords

Productivity, Diversity, climate change, mesocosm, 1.4 m3, Kiel, Germany

Abstract

In order to examine the effects of warming and diversity changes on primary productivity, we conducted ameta-analysis on six independent indoor mesocosm experiments with a natural plankton community fromthe Baltic Sea. Temperature effects on primary productivity changed with light intensity and zooplanktondensity and analysed pathways between temperature, diversity and productivity, elucidating direct and indirecteffects of warming on primary productivity during the spring phytoplankton bloom. Our findings indicatethat warming directly increased carbon specific primary productivity, which was more pronouncedunder low grazing pressure. On the other hand, primary productivity per unit water volume did not respondto increased temperature, because of a negative temperature effect on phytoplankton biomass. Moreover,primary productivity response to temperature changes depended on light limitation. Using path analysis,we tested whether temperature effects were direct or mediated by warming effects on phytoplankton diversity.Although phytoplankton species richness had a positive impact on both net primary productivity andcarbon specific primary productivity – and evenness had a negative effect on net primary productivity –both richness and evenness were not affected by temperature. Thus, we suggest that diversity effects onprimary productivity depended mainly on other factors than temperature like grazing, sinking or nutrientlimitation, which themselves are temperature dependent.

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