Phytoplankton adapt to changing ocean environments

Autores

Irwin, A.J., Finkel, Z.V., Müller-Karger, F.E. and Troccoli-Ghinaglia, L.

Publicado en

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, v. 112(18):5762-5766

Año de publicación

2015

Afiliaciones

Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Mount Allison University, Sackville, NB, Canada E4L 1E6
Environmental Science Program, Mount Allison University, Sackville, NB, Canada E4L 1A7
Institute for Marine Remote Sensing/IMaRS, College of Marine Science, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg, FL 33701
Escuela de Ciencias Aplicadas del Mar, Universidad de Oriente, Boca de Río, Isla de Margarita, Venezuela

Programa

CRN3

Proyecto

CRN3094

Keywords

Climate change, evolution, phytoplankton, realized niches

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1414752112

Resumen

Model projections indicate that climate change may dramatically restructure phytoplankton communities, with cascading consequences for marine food webs. It is currently not known whether evolutionary change is likely to be able to keep pace with the rate of climate change. For simplicity, and in the absence of evidence to the contrary, most model projections assume species have fixed environmental preferences and will not adapt to changing environmental conditions on the century scale. Using 15 y of observations from Station CARIACO (Carbon Retention in a Colored Ocean), we show that most of the dominant species from a marine phytoplankton community were able to adapt their realized niches to track average increases in water temperature and irradiance, but the majority of species exhibited a fixed niche for nitrate. We do not know the extent of this adaptive capacity, so we cannot conclude that phytoplankton will be able to adapt to the changes anticipated over the next century, but community ecosystem models can no longer assume that phytoplankton cannot adapt.