Eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate African seagrass (Zostera capensis).

Despite knowledge that seagrass meadows are threatened by multiple global change stressors, significant gaps exist in current knowledge. In particular, little is known about the interactive effects of warming and eutrophication on seagrasses globally, or about responses of African seagrasses to glob...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Esther F Mvungi, Deena Pillay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215129
id doaj-16ab43089e974ffbbdd103ddee6c6532
record_format Article
spelling doaj-16ab43089e974ffbbdd103ddee6c65322021-03-03T20:44:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01144e021512910.1371/journal.pone.0215129Eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate African seagrass (Zostera capensis).Esther F MvungiDeena PillayDespite knowledge that seagrass meadows are threatened by multiple global change stressors, significant gaps exist in current knowledge. In particular, little is known about the interactive effects of warming and eutrophication on seagrasses globally, or about responses of African seagrasses to global change, despite these ecosystem engineers providing critical goods and services to local livelihoods. Here, we report on laboratory experiment assessing the main and joint effects of warming and nutrient enrichment on Cape eelgrass (Zostera capensis) from the West coast of South Africa, in which morphological attributes, photosynthetic efficiency and elemental content were assessed. Results indicate that shoot density, leaf length, aboveground biomass and effective quantum yield were negatively impacted by both warming and nutrient enrichment. Growth rate, leaf density and leaf width decreased with increasing nutrient levels but not temperature. In addition, epiphytic fouling on seagrass leaves were enhanced by both warming and nutrient enrichment but with warming eliciting a greater response. Collectively, our findings indicate a stronger effect of enrichment on Z. capensis performance relative to warming, suggesting that the upper levels of coastal eutrophication upon which our experiment was based is likely a stronger stressor than warming. Our findings also highlight limited interaction between warming and nutrient enrichment on Z. capensis performance, suggesting that effects of these stressors are likely to be propagated individually and not interactively. Our findings raise awareness of susceptibility of Z. capensis to eutrophication and the need to manage nutrient inputs into coastal ecosystems to preserve meadows of this seagrass and the critical ecosystem functions they provide.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215129
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Esther F Mvungi
Deena Pillay
spellingShingle Esther F Mvungi
Deena Pillay
Eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate African seagrass (Zostera capensis).
PLoS ONE
author_facet Esther F Mvungi
Deena Pillay
author_sort Esther F Mvungi
title Eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate African seagrass (Zostera capensis).
title_short Eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate African seagrass (Zostera capensis).
title_full Eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate African seagrass (Zostera capensis).
title_fullStr Eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate African seagrass (Zostera capensis).
title_full_unstemmed Eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate African seagrass (Zostera capensis).
title_sort eutrophication overrides warming as a stressor for a temperate african seagrass (zostera capensis).
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Despite knowledge that seagrass meadows are threatened by multiple global change stressors, significant gaps exist in current knowledge. In particular, little is known about the interactive effects of warming and eutrophication on seagrasses globally, or about responses of African seagrasses to global change, despite these ecosystem engineers providing critical goods and services to local livelihoods. Here, we report on laboratory experiment assessing the main and joint effects of warming and nutrient enrichment on Cape eelgrass (Zostera capensis) from the West coast of South Africa, in which morphological attributes, photosynthetic efficiency and elemental content were assessed. Results indicate that shoot density, leaf length, aboveground biomass and effective quantum yield were negatively impacted by both warming and nutrient enrichment. Growth rate, leaf density and leaf width decreased with increasing nutrient levels but not temperature. In addition, epiphytic fouling on seagrass leaves were enhanced by both warming and nutrient enrichment but with warming eliciting a greater response. Collectively, our findings indicate a stronger effect of enrichment on Z. capensis performance relative to warming, suggesting that the upper levels of coastal eutrophication upon which our experiment was based is likely a stronger stressor than warming. Our findings also highlight limited interaction between warming and nutrient enrichment on Z. capensis performance, suggesting that effects of these stressors are likely to be propagated individually and not interactively. Our findings raise awareness of susceptibility of Z. capensis to eutrophication and the need to manage nutrient inputs into coastal ecosystems to preserve meadows of this seagrass and the critical ecosystem functions they provide.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215129
work_keys_str_mv AT estherfmvungi eutrophicationoverrideswarmingasastressorforatemperateafricanseagrasszosteracapensis
AT deenapillay eutrophicationoverrideswarmingasastressorforatemperateafricanseagrasszosteracapensis
_version_ 1714820723248201728