AI Article Synopsis

  • Ocean warming leads to increased grazing pressure from tropical herbivores on temperate seaweed communities, particularly affecting the kelp Ecklonia radiata due to changes in its microbiota.
  • Changes in Ecklonia's microbiota under heat stress promoted microbial growth associated with disease, resulting in heightened consumption by the tropical sea urchin Tripneustes gratilla.
  • The effects of temperature on seaweed-associated microbiota and grazing are species-specific, highlighting the complex ecological interactions that may arise from warming oceans.

Article Abstract

The range-expansion of tropical herbivores due to ocean warming can profoundly alter temperate reef communities by overgrazing the seaweed forests that underpin them. Such ecological interactions may be mediated by changes to seaweed-associated microbiota in response to warming, but empirical evidence demonstrating this is rare. We experimentally simulated ocean warming and marine heatwaves (MHWs) to quantify effects on two dominant temperate seaweed species and their microbiota, as well as grazing by a tropical herbivore. The kelp Ecklonia radiata's microbiota in sustained warming and MHW treatments was enriched with microorganisms associated with seaweed disease and tissue degradation. In contrast, the fucoid Sargassum linearifolium's microbiota was unaffected by temperature. Consumption by the tropical sea-urchin Tripneustes gratilla was greater on Ecklonia where the microbiota had been altered by higher temperatures, while Sargassum's consumption was unaffected. Elemental traits (carbon, nitrogen), chemical defences (phenolics) and tissue bleaching of both seaweeds were generally unaffected by temperature. Effects of warming and MHWs on seaweed holobionts (host plus its microbiota) are likely species-specific. The effect of increased temperature on Ecklonia's microbiota and subsequent increased consumption suggest that changes to kelp microbiota may underpin kelp-herbivore interactions, providing novel insights into potential mechanisms driving change in species' interactions in warming oceans.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.17267DOI Listing

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