Do phytoplankton require oxygen to survive? A hypothesis and model synthesis from oxygen minimum zones

Author:

Wong Jane C. Y.12ORCID,Raven John A.345,Aldunate Montserrat16ORCID,Silva Sebastián7ORCID,Gaitán‐Espitia Juan Diego89ORCID,Vargas Cristian A.1610,Ulloa Osvaldo111ORCID,von Dassow Peter1212

Affiliation:

1. Instituto Milenio de Oceanografía, Universidad de Concepción Concepción Chile

2. Departamento de Ecología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Santiago Chile

3. Division of Plant Science University of Dundee at the James Hutton Institute Dundee UK

4. School of Biological Sciences, University of Western Australia Crawley Western Australia Australia

5. Climate Change Cluster, Faculty of Science University of Technology Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

6. Coastal Ecosystems and Global Environmental Change Lab (ECCA Lab), Department of Aquatic System, Faculty of Environmental Sciences Universidad de Concepcion Chile

7. Department of Molecular Ecology Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology Bremen Germany

8. School of Biological Sciences and The Swire Institute of Marine Sciences, The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong China

9. Institute for Climate and Carbon Neutrality, The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong China

10. Coastal Social‐Ecological Millennium Institute (SECOS), Universidad de Concepcion Concepcion Chile

11. Departamento de Oceanografía Universidad de Concepción Concepción Chile

12. Integrative Marine Ecology Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn Naples Italy

Abstract

AbstractIt is commonly known that phytoplankton have a pivotal role in marine biogeochemistry and ecosystems as carbon fixers and oxygen producers, but their response to deoxygenation has scarcely been studied. Nonetheless, in the major oceanic oxygen minimum zones (OMZs), all surface phytoplankton groups, regardless of size, disappear and are replaced by unique cyanobacteria lineages below the oxycline. To develop reasonable hypotheses to explain this pattern, we conduct a review of available information on OMZ phytoplankton, and we re‐analyze previously published data (flow cytometric and hydrographic) on vertical structure of phytoplankton communities in relation to light and O2 levels. We also review the physical constraints on O2 acquisition as well as O2‐dependent metabolisms in phototrophs. These considerations, along with estimates of the photosynthetic capacity of phytoplankton along OMZ depth profiles using published data, suggest that top‐down grazing, respiratory demand, and irradiance are insufficient to fully explain the vertical structure observed in the upper, more sunlit portions of OMZs. Photorespiration and water–water cycles are O2‐dependent pathways with low O2 affinities. Although their metabolic roles are still poorly understood, a hypothetical dependence on such pathways by the phytoplankton adapted to the oxic ocean might explain vertical patterns in OMZs and results of laboratory experiments. This can be represented in a simple model in which the requirement for photorespiration in surface phytoplankton and O2‐inhibition of OMZ lineages reproduces the observed vertical fluorescence profiles and the replacement of phytoplankton adapted to O2 by lineages restricted to the most O2‐deficient waters. A high O2 requirement by modern phytoplankton would suggest a positive feedback that intensifies trends in OMZ extent and ocean oxygenation or deoxygenation, both in Earth's past and in response to current climate change.

Funder

Instituto Milenio de Oceanografía

Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Oceanography

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