Low-salinity transitions drive abrupt microbial response to sea-level change
- PMID: 34708510
- DOI: 10.1111/ele.13893
Low-salinity transitions drive abrupt microbial response to sea-level change
Abstract
The salinisation of many coastal ecosystems is underway and is expected to continue into the future because of sea-level rise and storm intensification brought about by the changing climate. However, the response of soil microbes to increasing salinity conditions within coastal environments is poorly understood, despite their importance for nutrient cascading, carbon sequestration and wider ecosystem functioning. Here, we demonstrate deterioration in the productivity of a top-tier microbial group (testate amoebae) with increasing coastal salinity, which we show to be consistent across phylogenetic groups, salinity gradients, environment types and latitude. Our results show that microbial changes occur in the very early stages of marine inundation, presaging more radical changes in soil and ecosystem function and providing an early warning of coastal salinisation that could be used to improve coastal planning and adaptation.
Keywords: biomass; climate change; coastal ecology; microbial; productivity; salinity; sea level; testate amoebae.
© 2021 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
References
REFERENCES
-
- Barnett, R.L., Bernatchez, P., Garneau, M. & Juneau, M.-N. (2017a) Reconstructing late Holocene relative sea-level changes at the Magdalen Islands (Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada) using multi-proxy analyses. Journal of Quaternary Science, 32(3), 380-395. https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.2931.
-
- Barnett, R.L., Charman, D.J., Gehrels, W.R., Saher, M.H. & Marshall, W.A. (2013) Testate amoebae as sea-level indicators in northwestern Norway: developments in sample preparation and analysis. Acta Protozool, 52, 115-128.
-
- Barnett, R.L., Garneau, M.G. & Bernatchez, P. (2016) Salt-marsh sea-level indicators and transfer function development for the Magdalen Islands in the Gulf of St Lawrence, Canada. Marine Micropaleontology, 122, 13-26.
-
- Barnett, R.L., Newton, T.L., Charman, D.J. & Gehrels, W.R. (2017b) Salt-marsh testate amoebae as precise and widespread indicators of sea-level change. Earth-Science Reviews, 164, 193-207.
-
- Baselga, A., Orme, D., Villeger, S., De Bortoli, J. & Leprieur, F. (2018) betapart: Partitioning Beta Diversity into Turnover and Nestedness Components. R package - Version 1.5.4. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=betapart
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources