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Changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies

The color of many lakes and seas is changing, which is likely to affect the species composition of freshwater and marine phytoplankton communities. For example, cyanobacteria with phycobilisomes as light‐harvesting antennae can effectively utilize green or orange‐red light. However, recent studies s...

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Autores principales: Luimstra, Veerle M., Verspagen, Jolanda M. H., Xu, Tianshuo, Schuurmans, J. Merijn, Huisman, Jef
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7079016/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31840230
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2951
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author Luimstra, Veerle M.
Verspagen, Jolanda M. H.
Xu, Tianshuo
Schuurmans, J. Merijn
Huisman, Jef
author_facet Luimstra, Veerle M.
Verspagen, Jolanda M. H.
Xu, Tianshuo
Schuurmans, J. Merijn
Huisman, Jef
author_sort Luimstra, Veerle M.
collection PubMed
description The color of many lakes and seas is changing, which is likely to affect the species composition of freshwater and marine phytoplankton communities. For example, cyanobacteria with phycobilisomes as light‐harvesting antennae can effectively utilize green or orange‐red light. However, recent studies show that they use blue light much less efficiently than phytoplankton species with chlorophyll‐based light‐harvesting complexes, even though both phytoplankton groups may absorb blue light to a similar extent. Can we advance ecological theory to predict how these differences in light‐harvesting strategy affect competition between phytoplankton species? Here, we develop a new resource competition model in which the absorption and utilization efficiency of different colors of light are varied independently. The model was parameterized using monoculture experiments with a freshwater cyanobacterium and green alga, as representatives of phytoplankton with phycobilisome‐based vs. chlorophyll‐based light‐harvesting antennae. The parameterized model was subsequently tested in a series of competition experiments. In agreement with the model predictions, the green alga won the competition in blue light whereas the cyanobacterium won in red light, irrespective of the initial relative abundances of the species. These results are in line with observed changes in phytoplankton community structure in response to lake brownification. Similarly, in marine waters, the model predicts dominance of Prochlorococcus with chlorophyll‐based light‐harvesting complexes in blue light but dominance of Synechococcus with phycobilisomes in green light, with a broad range of coexistence in between. These predictions agree well with the known biogeographical distributions of these two highly abundant marine taxa. Our results offer a novel trait‐based approach to understand and predict competition between phytoplankton species with different photosynthetic pigments and light‐harvesting strategies.
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spelling pubmed-70790162020-03-19 Changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies Luimstra, Veerle M. Verspagen, Jolanda M. H. Xu, Tianshuo Schuurmans, J. Merijn Huisman, Jef Ecology Articles The color of many lakes and seas is changing, which is likely to affect the species composition of freshwater and marine phytoplankton communities. For example, cyanobacteria with phycobilisomes as light‐harvesting antennae can effectively utilize green or orange‐red light. However, recent studies show that they use blue light much less efficiently than phytoplankton species with chlorophyll‐based light‐harvesting complexes, even though both phytoplankton groups may absorb blue light to a similar extent. Can we advance ecological theory to predict how these differences in light‐harvesting strategy affect competition between phytoplankton species? Here, we develop a new resource competition model in which the absorption and utilization efficiency of different colors of light are varied independently. The model was parameterized using monoculture experiments with a freshwater cyanobacterium and green alga, as representatives of phytoplankton with phycobilisome‐based vs. chlorophyll‐based light‐harvesting antennae. The parameterized model was subsequently tested in a series of competition experiments. In agreement with the model predictions, the green alga won the competition in blue light whereas the cyanobacterium won in red light, irrespective of the initial relative abundances of the species. These results are in line with observed changes in phytoplankton community structure in response to lake brownification. Similarly, in marine waters, the model predicts dominance of Prochlorococcus with chlorophyll‐based light‐harvesting complexes in blue light but dominance of Synechococcus with phycobilisomes in green light, with a broad range of coexistence in between. These predictions agree well with the known biogeographical distributions of these two highly abundant marine taxa. Our results offer a novel trait‐based approach to understand and predict competition between phytoplankton species with different photosynthetic pigments and light‐harvesting strategies. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-02-03 2020-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7079016/ /pubmed/31840230 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2951 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Ecology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Ecological Society of America This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Articles
Luimstra, Veerle M.
Verspagen, Jolanda M. H.
Xu, Tianshuo
Schuurmans, J. Merijn
Huisman, Jef
Changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies
title Changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies
title_full Changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies
title_fullStr Changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies
title_full_unstemmed Changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies
title_short Changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies
title_sort changes in water color shift competition between phytoplankton species with contrasting light‐harvesting strategies
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7079016/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31840230
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2951
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