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Seasonal environmental transitions and metabolic plasticity in a sea-ice alga from an individual cell perspective. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • * A study using advanced imaging techniques assessed the biomolecular composition of these microalgae over six weeks in different Arctic fjord sites, revealing their ability to adapt to changing sea ice conditions.
  • * Environmental changes, such as nitrogen limitation and rising water temperatures, can lead to a shift in the algae's nutrient composition, potentially impacting carbon transfer in the marine ecosystem due to climate change effects.

Article Abstract

Sea-ice microalgae are a key source of energy and nutrient supply to polar marine food webs, particularly during spring, prior to open-water phytoplankton blooms. The nutritional quality of microalgae as a food source depends on their biomolecular (lipid:protein:carbohydrate) composition. In this study, we used synchrotron-based Fourier transform infra-red microspectroscopy (s-FTIR) to measure the biomolecular content of a dominant sea-ice taxa, Nitzschia frigida, from natural land-fast ice communities throughout the Arctic spring season. Repeated sampling over six weeks from an inner (relatively stable) and an outer (relatively dynamic) fjord site revealed high intra-specific variability in biomolecular content, elucidating the plasticity of N. frigida to adjust to the dynamic sea ice and water conditions. Environmental triggers indicating the end of productivity in the ice and onset of ice melt, including nitrogen limitation and increased water temperature, drove an increase in lipid and fatty acids stores, and a decline in protein and carbohydrate content. In the context of climate change and the predicted Atlantification of the Arctic, dynamic mixing and abrupt warmer water advection could truncate these important end-of-season environmental shifts, causing the algae to be released from the ice prior to adequate lipid storage, influencing carbon transfer through the polar marine system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11217269PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-65273-0DOI Listing

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