Concurrent global change and marine heatwaves disturb phototrophic more
than heterotrophic protist diversity
Abstract
Anthropogenic pressures like ocean warming, acidification, rising N:P
ratios, and marine heatwaves are affecting eukaryotic plankton
diversity, though their combined impacts are rarely studied. To address
this, we conducted a mesocosm experiment on a North Sea plankton
community, testing the influence of a marine heatwave under ambient and
future environmental conditions. Using 18S rRNA amplicon sequencing, we
found that global change generally reduced protist diversity, in
particular that of phototrophic organisms. While heterotrophs were
largely unaffected by heatwaves, phototrophic diversity declined
especially during cooling and only recovered under ambient conditions.
Global change shifted the community from nano- to pico-sized phototrophs
and increased harmful algae bloom species and parasites, while heatwaves
elevated marine ochrophytes. The coccolithophore Gephyrocapsa oceanica
thrived under both stressors. Our findings suggest that changing
baseline conditions and extreme events can differentially impact
heterotrophic and phototrophic diversity, with potential consequences
for the metabolic balance of eukaryotic plankton communities.