Litcius/Paper detail

Looks can be deceiving: contrasting temperature characteristics of two morphologically similar kelp species co-occurring in the Arctic

Kiara Franke, Daniel Liesner, Svenja Heesch, Inka Bartsch

2021Botanica Marina28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Two morphologically similar digitate kelp species, Laminaria digitata and Hedophyllum nigripes , co-occur along a shallow sublittoral depth gradient in the Arctic but, in contrast to L. digitata , very few ecophysiological data exist for H. nigripes . We investigated growth, survival, photosynthetic characteristics and carbon:nitrogen ratios of juvenile sporophytes, and recruitment and survival of gametophytes in genetically verified Arctic isolates of both species along temperature gradients (0–25 °C) over 14 days. Laminaria digitata gametophytes survived 23–24 °C, while sporophytes survived 21–22 °C. Hedophyllum nigripes had lower temperature affinities. Gametophytes survived 19–21 °C, while sporophytes survived 18 °C. Male gametophytes were more heat-tolerant than female gametophytes in both species. The pronounced cold adaption of H. nigripes compared to L. digitata also became apparent in different sporophyte growth optima ( L. digitata : 15 °C; H. nigripes : 10 °C) and gametogenesis optima ( L. digitata : 5–15 °C; H. nigripes : 0–10 °C). Higher carbon:nitrogen ratios in H. nigripes suggest an adaptation to nutrient poor Arctic conditions. The overall temperature performance of H. nigripes possibly restricts the species to Arctic–Sub-Arctic regions, while Arctic L. digitata behaved similarly to cold-temperate populations. Our data suggest that a future increase in seawater temperatures may hamper the success of H. nigripes and favour L. digitata in Arctic environments.

Topics & Concepts

Laminaria digitataBiologyKelpSporophyteArcticBotanyLaminariaEcologyAlgaeMarine and coastal plant biologyCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsBryophyte Studies and Records