Uncovering Mechanisms of Phytoplankton Response to Climate Change

Abstract

Phytoplankton are responsible for approximately half the primary production on earth, fueling marine food webs and driving the cycling of carbon and inorganic nutrients in the oceans. Climate change is predicted to alter the marine environment by elevating carbon dioxide, increasing temperature, and decreasing the availability of inorganic nutrients in the surface ocean where phytoplankton dominate. To predict phytoplankton productivity and abundance in the future requires an understanding of the mechanisms of phytoplankton response to these environmental changes. Here we investigate how a model phytoplankton, Thalassiosira pseudonana, acclimates to increasing carbon dioxide through physiological and gene expression changes, and how picophytoplankton communities in the tropical Atlantic respond to variations in temperature and nutrient availability. By uncovering mechanisms of phytoplankton response to environmental variables we gain new insights into predicting how marine food webs and biogeochemical cycles may be altered by climate change.

Description

Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015

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