Projecting kelp (Ecklonia radiata) gametophyte thermal adaptation and persistence under climate change

Author:

Veenhof R J1ORCID,Champion C12ORCID,Dworjanyn S A1,Schwoerbel J3,Visch W3,Coleman M A12

Affiliation:

1. National Marine Science Centre, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University , Coffs Harbour, NSW , Australia

2. Fisheries Research, NSW Department of Primary Industries, National Marine Science Centre , Coffs Harbour, NSW , Australia

3. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania , Hobart, Tasmania , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background and aims Kelp forests underpin temperate marine ecosystems but are declining due to ocean warming, causing loss of associated ecosystem services. Projections suggest significant future decline but often only consider the persistence of adult sporophytes. Kelps have a biphasic life cycle, and the haploid gametophyte can be more thermally tolerant than the sporophyte. Therefore, projections may be altered when considering the thermal tolerance of gametophytes. Methods We undertook thermal tolerance experiments to quantify the effect of temperature on gametophyte survival, relative growth rate (RGR) and sex ratio for three genetically distinct populations of Ecklonia radiata gametophytes from comparatively high, mid- and low latitudes (43°, 33° and 30°S). We then used these data to project the likely consequences of climate-induced thermal change on gametophyte persistence and performance across its eastern Australian range, using generalized additive and linear models. Key results All populations were adapted to local temperatures and their thermal maximum was 2–3 °C above current maximum in situ temperatures. The lowest latitude population was most thermally tolerant (~70 % survival up to 27 °C), while survival and RGR decreased beyond 25.5 and 20.5 °C for the mid- and low-latitude populations, respectively. Sex ratios were skewed towards females with increased temperature in the low- and high-latitude populations. Spatially explicit model projections under future ocean warming (2050-centred) revealed a minimal decline in survival (0–30 %) across populations, relative to present-day predictions. RGRs were also projected to decline minimally (0–2 % d−1). Conclusions Our results contrast with projections for the sporophyte stage of E. radiata, which suggest a 257-km range contraction concurrent with loss of the low-latitude population by 2100. Thermal adaptation in E. radiata gametophytes suggests this life stage is likely resilient to future ocean warming and is unlikely to be a bottleneck for the future persistence of kelp.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Seaweed solutions

University of Tasmania

Deakin University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science

Reference112 articles.

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2. Extreme marine heatwaves alter kelp forest community near its equatorward distribution limit;Arafeh-Dalmau;Frontiers in Marine Science,2019

3. Major shifts at the range edge of marine forests: the combined effects of climate changes and limited dispersal;Assis;Scientific Reports,2017

4. Projected climate changes threaten ancient refugia of kelp forests in the North Atlantic;Assis;Global Change Biology,2018

5. Fast sporophyte replacement after removal suggests banks of latent microscopic stages of Laminaria ochroleuca (Phaeophyceae) in tide pools in northern Portugal;Barradas;Cahiers de Biologie Marine,2011

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