Cell size explains shift in phytoplankton community structure following storm-induced changes in light and nutrients

IF 4.4 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY
Ecology Pub Date : 2025-03-11 DOI:10.1002/ecy.70043
Alexis L. N. Guislain, Jens C. Nejstgaard, Jan Köhler, Erik Sperfeld, Ute Mischke, Birger Skjelbred, Hans-Peter Grossart, Anne Lyche Solheim, Mark O. Gessner, Stella A. Berger
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Abstract

Understanding the mechanisms driving community structure and dynamics is crucial in the face of escalating climate change, including increasing incidences of extreme weather. Cell size is a master trait of small organisms that is subject to a trade-off between resistance to grazing and competition for resources, and thus holds potential to explain and predict community dynamics in response to disturbances. Here, we aimed at determining whether cell size can explain shifts in phytoplankton communities following changes in nutrient and light conditions resulting from storm-induced inputs of nutrients and colored dissolved organic matter (cDOM) to deep clearwater lakes. To ensure realistic environmental conditions, we used a crossed gradient design to conduct a large-scale enclosure experiment over 6 weeks. Cell size explained phytoplankton community structure when light availability declined as a result of cDOM supply. Initially unimodal, with small-celled species accounting for up to 60% of the total community biovolume, the cell-size distribution gradually shifted toward large-celled species as light levels declined following cDOM addition. Neither nutrients nor mesozooplankton affected the shift in cell-size distribution. These results suggest a distinct competitive advantage of larger over smaller species at reduced light levels following cDOM inputs during storm events. Importantly, the clustering of species in two distinct size classes implies that interspecific size differences matter as much as cell size per se to understand community dynamics. Given that shifts in cell-size distribution have strong implications for food-web structure and biogeochemical cycles, our results point to the importance of analyzing cell-size distributions of small organisms as an essential element to forecast community and ecosystem dynamics in response to environmental change.

Abstract Image

细胞大小解释了在风暴引起的光照和营养变化后浮游植物群落结构的变化
面对不断升级的气候变化,包括极端天气事件的增加,了解驱动群落结构和动态的机制至关重要。细胞大小是小型生物的主要特征,它受制于对放牧的抵抗和对资源的竞争之间的权衡,因此具有解释和预测响应干扰的群落动态的潜力。在这里,我们的目的是确定细胞大小是否可以解释浮游植物群落在营养和光照条件变化后的变化,这些变化是由风暴引起的营养物质和彩色溶解有机物(cDOM)输入到深水湖泊引起的。为了保证真实的环境条件,我们采用交叉梯度设计进行了为期6周的大规模围封实验。当cDOM供应导致光有效性下降时,细胞大小解释了浮游植物群落结构。最初单峰分布,小细胞物种占群落总生物量的60%,随着cDOM光照水平的下降,细胞大小分布逐渐向大细胞物种转移。营养物和中浮游动物都不影响细胞大小分布的变化。这些结果表明,在风暴事件中cDOM输入后光照水平降低时,较大的物种比较小的物种具有明显的竞争优势。重要的是,物种在两个不同大小类别中的聚类意味着种间大小差异与细胞大小本身一样重要,可以理解群落动态。鉴于细胞大小分布的变化对食物网结构和生物地球化学循环具有重要意义,我们的研究结果表明,分析小生物的细胞大小分布对于预测响应环境变化的群落和生态系统动态具有重要意义。
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来源期刊
Ecology
Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
2.10%
发文量
332
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Ecology publishes articles that report on the basic elements of ecological research. Emphasis is placed on concise, clear articles documenting important ecological phenomena. The journal publishes a broad array of research that includes a rapidly expanding envelope of subject matter, techniques, approaches, and concepts: paleoecology through present-day phenomena; evolutionary, population, physiological, community, and ecosystem ecology, as well as biogeochemistry; inclusive of descriptive, comparative, experimental, mathematical, statistical, and interdisciplinary approaches.
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