GSTDTAP
项目编号1851194
BEE: Testing the evolutionary responses of mixotrophs to future ocean conditions
Holly Moeller (Principal Investigator)
主持机构University of California-Santa Barbara
项目开始年2019
2019-05-15
项目结束日期2022-04-30
资助机构US-NSF
项目类别Standard Grant
项目经费536087(USD)
国家美国
语种英语
英文摘要Aquatic ecosystems host a wide variety of single-celled, microscopic organisms. Many of these species live near the surface of the water, where they grow and reproduce using different metabolic strategies that shape their place in the marine food web. For example, biologists have traditionally grouped planktonic microbes into either primary producers (which use photosynthesis to create new organic matter) or heterotrophs (which eat organic matter - such as the bodies - produced by other organisms). However, a large number of species are actually mixotrophic: they "mix" these two forms of metabolism by simultaneously conducting photosynthesis and eating smaller cells, including bacteria. Furthermore, many mixotrophs are metabolically flexible: they may rely more or less on each source of metabolism depending on environmental conditions. Because photosynthesis (which takes carbon out of the atmosphere and locks it into organic matter) and heterotrophy (which respires organic matter back into carbon dioxide) control whether or not oceanic food webs act as carbon sinks (having a net removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere), understanding mixotroph metabolism is critical to predicting the effects of marine plankton on atmospheric carbon. This project advances understanding of mixotroph metabolism by quantifying the extent to which mixotrophs can alter their reliance on photosynthesis over short and long timescales. The project tests how quickly mixotrophs can adapt to both warmer and colder water conditions, and how these adaptations alter their role in the carbon cycle. Researchers - including graduate students, a postdoctoral researcher, and undergraduate trainees - will measure the physiological responses of experimentally evolved mixotrophs and use mathematical models to connect these changes to global oceanic carbon cycling. As data are collected, they are shared with the public through outreach seminars, annual open house events, and weekly scientific presentations at the local Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.

In order to predict biologically mediated feedbacks in the climate system, we must understand how marine plankton will respond to future ocean conditions. While a number of studies have sought to quantify the potential evolutionary response of phytoplankton, much less is known about the impacts of shifting conditions (e.g., increased temperature) on mixotrophs. What data are available suggest that mixotrophs may modulate a positive climate feedback loop: when warmed, mixotrophs become more heterotrophic, thus reducing their contribution to the biological pump and enhancing local respiration of organic carbon. Warming may also result in reductions in cell size, reducing sinking fluxes and carbon export from the upper ocean. Furthermore, because the predicted increase in oceanic stratification is expected to favor mixotrophs, their metabolic responses may be increasingly significant to understanding the global carbon cycle. The PI of this project is experimentally evolving mixotrophs under a range of temperature conditions in a fully factorial design that also manipulates the availability of light (photosynthesis) and prey (heterotrophy). She quantifies the carbon budget, grazing activity, nutrient content, and grazer palatability of evolved lineages in order to estimate the impact of any observed adaptations on carbon cycling. Specifically, the investigator asks how evolved lineages compare to ancestral lineages in their ability to tolerate altered thermal conditions, and connects differences in fitness to shifts in reliance on photosynthesis versus heterotrophy. Simultaneously, she incorporates a mixotrophy module into a global ocean biogeochemistry model, allowing the quantification of the impact of mixotrophs with either contemporary or evolved physiological traits. This work will provide some of the first known data on mixotroph plastic and evolutionary responses, and allow the scaling of these responses to their potential impacts on upper ocean biogeochemistry.

This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
文献类型项目
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/213215
专题环境与发展全球科技态势
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Holly Moeller .BEE: Testing the evolutionary responses of mixotrophs to future ocean conditions.2019.
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