Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA USA.
Ocean Sciences Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA USA.
Harmful Algae. 2020 Jan;91:101728. doi: 10.1016/j.hal.2019.101728. Epub 2019 Dec 20.
Many phytoplankton species, including many harmful algal bloom (HAB) species, survive long periods between blooms through formation of benthic resting stages. Because they are crucial to the persistence of these species and the initiation of new blooms, the physiology of benthic stages must be considered to accurately predict responses to climate warming and associated environmental changes. The benthic stages of dinoflagellates, called resting cysts, germinate in response to the combination of favorable temperature, oxygen-availability, and release from dormancy. The latter is a mechanism that prevents germination even when oxygen and temperature conditions are favorable. Here, evidence of temperature-mediated control of dormancy duration from the dinoflagellates Alexandrium catenella and Pyrodinium bahamense-two HAB species that cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP)-is reviewed and presented alongside new evidence of complementary, temperature-based control of cyst quiescence (the state in which cysts germinate on exposure to favorable conditions). Interaction of the two temperature-based mechanisms with climate is explored through a simple model parameterized using results from recent experiments with A. catenella. Simulations demonstrate the importance of seasonal temperature cycles for the synchronization of cysts' release from dormancy and are consistent with biogeography-based inferences that A. catenella is more tolerant of warming in habitats that experience a larger range of seasonal temperature variation (i.e., have higher temperature seasonality). Temperature seasonality is much greater in shallow, long-residence time habitats than in deep, open-water ones. As warming shifts species' ranges, cyst beds may persist longer in more seasonally variable, shallow inshore habitats than in deep offshore ones, promoting HABs that are more localized and commence earlier each year. Recent field investigations of A. catenella also point to the importance of new cyst formation as a factor triggering bloom termination through mass sexual induction. In areas where temperature seasonality restricts the flux of new swimming cells (germlings) to narrow temporal windows, warming is unlikely to promote longer and more intense HAB impacts-even when water column conditions would otherwise promote prolonged bloom development. Many species likely have a strong drive to sexually differentiate and produce new cysts once concentrations reach levels that are conducive to new cyst formation. This phenomenon can impose a limit to bloom intensification and suggests an important role for cyst bed quiescence in determining the duration of HAB risk periods.
许多浮游植物物种,包括许多有害藻华(HAB)物种,通过形成底栖休眠阶段在藻华之间长时间生存。由于它们对这些物种的持续存在和新藻华的爆发至关重要,因此必须考虑底栖阶段的生理学,以准确预测对气候变暖及相关环境变化的响应。甲藻的底栖阶段,称为休眠孢囊,在有利的温度、氧气可用性和从休眠中释放的组合的刺激下萌发。后者是一种机制,即使氧气和温度条件有利,也能阻止萌发。在这里,审查了来自两种 HAB 物种亚历山大藻(Alexandrium catenella)和夜光藻(Pyrodinium bahamense)的休眠持续时间的温度介导控制的证据,并提出了休眠孢囊静止(暴露于有利条件下萌发的孢囊状态)的温度控制的新证据。通过使用最近与 A. catenella 进行的实验结果参数化的简单模型,探讨了这两种基于温度的机制与气候的相互作用。模拟表明,季节性温度循环对于从休眠中释放休眠孢囊的同步非常重要,并且与基于生物地理学的推断一致,即 A. catenella 在经历更大范围季节性温度变化(即具有更高温度季节性)的栖息地中对变暖的耐受性更强。浅海、长时间停留的栖息地的温度季节性比深海、开阔水域的温度季节性大得多。随着变暖改变物种的范围,孢囊床可能在季节性变化更大、浅近岸栖息地中停留更长时间,而不是在深近海栖息地中停留更长时间,从而促进每年更早开始、更本地化的 HAB。最近对 A. catenella 的实地调查也指出了新孢囊形成作为通过大规模有性诱导终止藻华的触发因素的重要性。在季节性温度限制新游动细胞(原虫)流入狭窄时间窗口的区域,即使水柱条件否则有利于延长藻华的发展,变暖也不太可能促进更长时间和更强烈的 HAB 影响。一旦浓度达到有利于新孢囊形成的水平,许多物种很可能强烈倾向于有性分化并产生新的孢囊。这种现象可以限制藻华的加剧,并表明孢囊床静止在确定 HAB 风险期持续时间方面起着重要作用。