Light limitation and water velocity modify the impacts of simulated marine heatwaves on juvenile giant kelp

光照限制和水流速度会改变模拟海洋热浪对幼年巨藻的影响

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Abstract

Coastal regions are complex habitats, where multiple natural and anthropogenic drivers can interact to affect the survival and growth of marine organisms. The giant kelp Macrocystis pyrifera is sensitive to increasing seawater temperatures and susceptible to marine heatwaves. Light availability and hydrodynamics can also affect the growth, morphology, and resilience of this species. In this experiment, juvenile sporophytes of M. pyrifera from Scorching Bay, Wellington, Aotearoa, New Zealand, a were exposed to a combination of simulated marine heatwaves at one of four different temperatures (20, 22, and 24°C compared to a 16°C control), one of two irradiance levels (shaded: 0.9 mol photons · m(-2) · d(-1) or ambient: 1.4 mol photons · m(-2) · d(-1)), and one of two flow speeds (5.3 cm · s(-1) or 6.1 cm · s(-1)) in a fully factorial design. Simulated heatwaves lasted for 21 days, with temperatures ramped by 2°C · d(-1), followed by a 21-day recovery phase. The heatwave treatments represented severe heatwaves in present day or hypothetical future conditions, whereas the control represented historical average summer sea temperatures in Wellington, and 21 days represented a realistic duration for heatwaves in this region. Temperature was the main driver of negative physiological impacts, with 100% of sporophytes dying within 42 days of exposure to a 24°C heatwave. Sporophytes experienced 44% mortality at 20°C and 81% mortality at 22°C, and growth rates declined significantly with increasing temperature. However, survival rates were modified by light and water velocity, with 56% of sporophytes surviving under a combination of ambient light and fast water velocity, compared with less than 50% under each of the other light-velocity combinations. Light limitation also reduced sporophyte survival, growth rates, and effective quantum yield. Water velocity alone did not significantly affect sporophytes, but flow speeds had interactive effects with temperature and light. The findings of this experiment suggest that M. pyrifera at sites with optimal environmental conditions, including low sediment loads and fast tidal flows, could be more resilient to marine heatwaves, as long as temperatures do not exceed critical thresholds for survival.

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