Frontiers in Marine Science (Aug 2021)

Elevated pCO2 Impedes Succession of Phytoplankton Community From Diatoms to Dinoflagellates Along With Increased Abundance of Viruses and Bacteria

  • Ruiping Huang,
  • Jiazhen Sun,
  • Yunlan Yang,
  • Xiaowen Jiang,
  • Zhen Wang,
  • Xue Song,
  • Tifeng Wang,
  • Di Zhang,
  • He Li,
  • Xiangqi Yi,
  • Shouchang Chen,
  • Nanou Bao,
  • Liming Qu,
  • Rui Zhang,
  • Nianzhi Jiao,
  • Yahui Gao,
  • Bangqin Huang,
  • Xin Lin,
  • Guang Gao,
  • Kunshan Gao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.642208
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Eutrophic coastal regions are highly productive and greatly influenced by human activities. Primary production supporting the coastal ecosystems is supposed to be affected by progressive ocean acidification driven by increasing CO2 emissions. In order to investigate the effects of high pCO2 (HC) on eutrophic plankton community structure and ecological functions, we employed 9 mesocosms and carried out an experiment under ambient (∼410 ppmv) and future high (1000 ppmv) atmospheric pCO2 conditions, using in situ plankton community in Wuyuan Bay, East China Sea. Our results showed that HC along with natural seawater temperature rise significantly boosted biomass of diatoms with decreased abundance of dinoflagellates in the late stage of the experiment, demonstrating that HC repressed the succession from diatoms to dinoflagellates, a phenomenon observed during algal blooms in the East China Sea. HC did not significantly influence the primary production or biogenic silica contents of the phytoplankton assemblages. However, the HC treatments increased the abundance of viruses and heterotrophic bacteria, reflecting a refueling of nutrients for phytoplankton growth from virus-mediated cell lysis and bacterial degradation of organic matters. Conclusively, our results suggest that increasing CO2 concentrations can modulate plankton structure including the succession of phytoplankton community and the abundance of viruses and bacteria in eutrophic coastal waters, which may lead to altered biogeochemical cycles of carbon and nutrients.

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