Award: OCE-1638958

Award Title: Dimensions: Collaborative Research: Genetic, functional and phylogenetic diversity determines marine phytoplankton community responses to changing temperature and nutrients
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: Michael E. Sieracki

Outcomes Report

Intellectual merit Marine phytoplankton, the microscopic photosynthetic microbes, are responsible for about half of photosynthetic oxygen production on Earth and form the base of most aquatic food webs. They are sensitive to climate change, rising temperatures in particular. Their ability to survive and adapt to warming is key to the aquatic ecosystem resilience to global climate change, but much remains unknown. In this project, the researchers determined the physiological, ecological and evolutionary responses of phytoplankton to rising temperature and changing nutrient levels. The research team found that phytoplankton can adapt evolutionarily to rising temperatures, increasing their optimum (Topt) and maximum (Tmax) temperatures for growth. There may also be a trade-off where high-temperature adapted populations grow less well under low temperatures. Researchers also found that nutrient limitation may preclude successful adaptation of phytoplankton to high temperature, consequently, a simultaneous increase in temperature and a decrease in nutrient concentration, predicted to occur in many parts of the ocean, may be more detrimental for phytoplankton than the effects of these two stressors separately. While adapting to high temperature, phytoplankton also change their carbon and nutrient content, cell size and shape, and the composition of fatty acids, which may have consequences for major biogeochemical cycles, food webs, and human nutrition. This research also found that temperate habitats where temperatures fluctuate seasonally have species with a greater range of optimum temperatures compared to the tropical habitats where temperatures are more constant. This diversity in temperature traits may help phytoplankton adapt to novel environmental conditions, including high temperatures. The results of this project increase the general understanding of how marine phytoplankton may respond to warming and help predict how ecosystems may change in the future. Broader Impacts The results of this project were disseminated through numerous scientific conferences, invited seminars and peer-reviewed publications. Three postdoctoral associates, two graduate students and several undergraduate students were trained on this project. They learned diverse experimental and field sampling techniques, data analysis, modeling and manuscript writing. Grad students and postdocs also received training in mentorship of undergraduate students. Two of the postdocs received tenure-track positions, one in the US and another one in Europe, and both graduate students are continuing their academic path as postdoctoral researchers. A middle school teacher from a rural district in MI received training in scientific methods and hands on research in aquatic ecology and climate change. Last Modified: 04/13/2021 Submitted by: Elena G Litchman
DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Daily growth rates for Thermal Performance Curve (TPC) of Chaetoceros simplex after about 100 generations of evolution at seven temperatures, 12-34 degrees C.2019-10-07Data not available
Daily growth rates for Thermal Performance Curve (TPC) of Chaetoceros simplex in nitrogen-replete evolved populations after about 200 generations of evolution at eight temperatures, 10-35 degrees C.2019-10-07Final no updates expected
Daily growth rates of 8 populations of Chaetoceros simplex grown at 31C with control population at 25C, in regular L1 medium (884 µm NO3-)2019-10-07Final no updates expected
C:N ratios of two heat‐tolerant populations of Chaetoceros simplex and control and ancestral populations, at different temperatures2019-10-07Final no updates expected
Fatty acid profiles by biovolume of replicate populations of Thalassiosira pseudonana, selected at 16 and 31C for ~500 generations and assayed at 4 temperatures2019-10-28Final no updates expected
Fatty acid profiles per cell of replicate populations of Thalassiosira pseudonana, selected at 16 and 31C for ~500 generations and assayed at 4 temperatures2019-10-28Final no updates expected
Per-capita growth rates for T. pseudonana selected at low and high temperatures for ~350 generations and assayed at 10 temperatures2019-10-28Final no updates expected
Herbivorous protist abundances under simultaneous manipulation of temperature and nutrients from the Long-term Plankton Time Series site in Narragansett Bay, RI in 20172023-04-10Final no updates expected
Temperature and nutrient dependent phytoplankton growth and herbivorous protist grazing rates from the Long-term Plankton Time Series site in Narragansett Bay, RI in 20172023-04-12Final no updates expected

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People

Principal Investigator: Elena G. Litchman (Michigan State University)

Co-Principal Investigator: Christopher A Klausmeier