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Species-specific acclimatization capacity of key traits explains global vertical distribution of seagrass species
Authors:Mario Minguito-Frutos  Jordi Boada  Jordi F Pagès  Candela Marco-Méndez  Rohan Arthur  Matthew P Adams  Teresa Alcoverro
Institution:1. Ecologia Marina, Centre d'Estudis Avançats de Blanes (CEAB-CSIC), Blanes, Spain;2. Laboratoire d'océanographie de Villefranche, Sorbonne Université, Villefranche-sur-mer, France;3. School of Mathematical Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Abstract:

Aim

The global vertical depth distribution of seagrass species remains poorly understood. Locally, the abundance and distribution of seagrasses is determined by light penetration, but at global levels each seagrass species has very distinct maximum distributional depth ranges, indicating that plant-associated traits must also influence their specific depth ranges. Seagrass-specific attributes, such as plant size or architecture, growth or reproductive strategy and their physiological and/or morphological acclimatization potential, have been suggested to be responsible for this variety of vertical distributions. We investigate here whether these species-specific traits drive differences in the global maximum vertical distribution of seagrasses.

Location

Global.

Time period

Publications between 1982 and 2020.

Major taxa studied

Seagrasses (order Alismatales).

Methods

We tested whether the species-specific maximum vertical distribution of seagrasses can be predicted by (1) their rhizome diameter (a proxy for plant size); (2) their functional resilience (growth/reproductive strategy); or (3) their acclimatization capacity. For the last aspect, we used a systematic review followed by meta-analytical approaches to select key seagrass traits that could potentially acclimatize to extreme light ranges across different seagrasses.

Results

We found that vertical distribution is best explained by the species-specific acclimatization capacity of various seagrass traits, including saturation irradiance (physiological trait), leaves per shoot (morphological trait) and above-ground biomass (structural trait). In contrast, our results indicate no predictive power of seagrass size or growth/reproductive strategy on the vertical distribution of seagrasses.

Main conclusions

Across the globe, the ability of seagrass species to thrive at a wide range of depths is strongly linked to the species-specific acclimatization capacity of key traits at different organizational levels.
Keywords:acclimatization  depth  light  seagrasses  species traits  vertical distribution
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