Response of Phytoplankton Communities to Variation in Salinity in a Small Mediterranean Coastal Lagoon: Future Management and Foreseen Climate Change Consequences

Author:

Ligorini Viviana12ORCID,Garrido Marie3,Malet Nathalie4,Simon Louise12,Alonso Loriane2,Bastien Romain2,Aiello Antoine2ORCID,Cecchi Philippe5ORCID,Pasqualini Vanina12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. UMR 6134 SPE CNRS, Université de Corse, 20250 Corte, France

2. UAR 3514 Stella Mare CNRS, Université de Corse, 20620 Biguglia, France

3. Environmental Agency of Corsica, 20250 Corte, France

4. Ifremer, Laboratoire Environnement Ressources Provence-Azur-Corse (LER/PAC), 20600 Bastia, France

5. MARBEC, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, Ifremer, IRD, 34095 Montpellier, France

Abstract

Mediterranean coastal lagoons are particularly vulnerable to increasing direct anthropogenic threats and climate change. Understanding their potential responses to global and local changes is essential to develop management strategies adapted to these ecosystems. Salinity is a fundamental structuring factor for phytoplankton communities; however, its role under climate change is understudied. We hypothesized that salinity variations imposed by climate change and/or management actions could disturb Mediterranean lagoons’ phytoplankton communities. To test our hypothesis, we performed two 5-day microcosm experiments in which natural phytoplankton assemblages from the Santa Giulia lagoon (Corsica Island) were subjected to three increasing (53–63–73) and decreasing (33–26–20) levels of salinity, to mimic strong evaporation and flash flooding, respectively. Results indicate that over-salinization inhibited growth and modified the assemblages’ composition. Freshening, on the contrary, showed feeble effects, mainly boosting microphytoplankton abundance and depleting diversity at lowest salinity. In both experiments and under freshening in particular, initially rare species emerged, while photosynthetic activity was degraded by salinity increase only. We demonstrated that phytoplankton communities’ structure and metabolism are strongly altered by the predicted implications of climate change. Such impacts have to be considered for future management of coastal lagoons (control of sea exchanges and watershed fluxes). This work constitutes a priority step towards the proactive adapted management and conservation of such as-yet-neglected ecosystems in the context of climate change.

Funder

Corsican Regional Council

University of Corsica

French Government

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

Reference108 articles.

1. Biodiversity, Climate Change, and Adaptation in the Mediterranean;Aurelle;Ecosphere,2022

2. MedECC (2020). Climate and Environmental Change in the Mediterranean Basin—Current Situation and Risks for the Future. First Mediterranean Assessment Report, Zenodo.

3. The Mediterranean Climate Change Hotspot in the CMIP5 and CMIP6 Projections;Cos;Earth Syst. Dyn.,2022

4. MWO (2018). Mediterranean Wetlands Outlook 2: Solutions for Sustainable Mediterranean Wetlands, Mediterranean Wetlands Observatory.

5. Chacón Abarca, S., Chávez, V., Silva, R., Martínez, M.L., and Anfuso, G. (2021). Understanding the Dynamics of a Coastal Lagoon: Drivers, Exchanges, State of the Environment, Consequences and Responses. Geosciences, 11.

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