Abstract Temperature is a major driver of phytoplankton growth and physiology, but despite decades of study on temperature effects, the influence of temperature fluctuations on the growth acclimation of marine phytoplankton is largely unknown. To address this knowledge gap, we subjected a coastal phytoplankton species,Heterosigma akashiwo, to ecologically relevant temperature shifts of 2–3°C, cumulatively totaling 3–16°C across a range from 6°C to 31°C over a 3‐week period. Using a symmetric design, we show time dependent differences between growth rates and that these changes were related to the magnitude of the temperature shift, but not the direction. Cell size scaled inversely with temperature at a rate of −1.9 to −3.3%°C−1at all except the highest temperature treatments > 25°C. Intraspecific variability in growth rates increased exponentially with cumulative thermal shifts, suggesting thermal variability may be a driver of intraspecific variation. The observed acclimation effects on phytoplankton growth rates suggest that ignoring acclimation effects could systematically under or overestimate temperature‐dependent primary production. Empirical results, contextualized with in situ coastal ocean temperature record, demonstrated that daily primary production could differ from current model assumptions utilizing acclimated rates by −33% to +36%. If broadly applicable to diverse phytoplankton species, these results have ramifications for predicting the ecology and production of phytoplankton in present day dynamic ecosystems and in future climate scenarios where thermal variability is expected to increase.
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Thermal acclimation influences the growth and toxin production of freshwater cyanobacteria
Abstract Understanding how altered temperature regimes affect harmful cyanobacterial bloom formation is essential for managing aquatic ecosystems amidst ongoing climate warming. This is difficult because algal performance can depend on both current and past environments, as plastic physiological changes (acclimation) may lag behind environmental change. Here, we investigate how temperature variation on sub‐weekly timescales affects population growth and toxin production given acclimation. We studied four ecologically important freshwater cyanobacterial strains under low‐ and high‐nutrient conditions, measuring population growth rate after acclimation and new exposure to a range of temperatures. Cold‐acclimated populations (15.7°C) outperformed fully acclimated populations (held in constant conditions) across 65% of thermal environments, while hot‐acclimated populations (35.7–42.6°C) underperformed across 75% of thermal environments. Over a 5‐day period, cold‐acclimatedMicrocystis aeruginosaproduced ~2.5‐fold more microcystin than hot‐acclimated populations experiencing the same temperature perturbation. Our results suggest that thermal variation and physiology interact in underappreciated ways to influence cyanobacterial growth, toxin production, and likely bloom formation.
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- PAR ID:
- 10447350
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Limnology and Oceanography Letters
- Volume:
- 7
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2378-2242
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- p. 34-42
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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