Scientific Reports (Oct 2023)

Ideal water temperature environment for giant Marimo (Aegagropila linnaei) in Lake Akan, Japan

  • Keisuke Nakayama,
  • Katsuaki Komai,
  • Motoshi Amano,
  • Shintarou Horii,
  • Yuichiro Somiya,
  • Etsuko Kumamoto,
  • Yoichi Oyama

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43792-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Aegagropila linnaei is a filamentous green algal species that often forms beautiful spherical shapes called "lake balls" or "Marimo". A. linnaei were once globally distributed around the world, but the population has been declining for several decades. Lake Akan, in Japan, is now the only lake in the world with a colony of giant Marimo (over 20 cm in diameter). Here we show the net growth rate of Marino resulting from photosynthesis and decomposition based on laboratory experiments, MRI analysis, and quantitative element analysis, which show the decomposition rate, the maximum annual Marimo diametric growth rate, and the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio, respectively. We found an explicit dependence of the decomposition rate of Marimo on the cumulative water temperature, with a threshold of 7 °C. MRI analysis showed a high correlation among a Marimo's diameter, surface thickness, and annual diametric growth rate. Moreover, the C/N ratio was high in the exterior side of the surface thickness, indicating that this layer is the main growth area for photosynthesis. These results suggest that the central cavity and the surface thickness represent the change in the growth environment such as water temperature and light intensity. Between the 1980s and the present, Between the 1980s and the present, the cumulative water temperature has increased from about 1250 to about 1600 °C-days. Therefore, the maximum surface thickness has decreased by approximately 1 cm, as estimated by water temperature records and annual diametric growth rates10. As a measure to preserve preferable conditions for colonies of giant Marimo in the face of global warming, the flow of low-temperature river water into Marimo colonies should be protected.