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Catchment properties and the photosynthetic trait composition of freshwater plant communities.

Lars L IversenA WinkelLars Baastrup-SpohrA B HinkeJanne AlahuhtaAnnette Baattrup-PedersenSebastian BirkPeter BrodersenP A ChambersFrauke EckeT FeldmannDaniel GeblerJ HeinoThomas Sand JespersenS Jannicke MoeT RiisL SassO VestergaardStephen C MaberlyKaj Sand-JensenOle Pedersen
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Unlike in land plants, photosynthesis in many aquatic plants relies on bicarbonate in addition to carbon dioxide (CO2) to compensate for the low diffusivity and potential depletion of CO2 in water. Concentrations of bicarbonate and CO2 vary greatly with catchment geology. In this study, we investigate whether there is a link between these concentrations and the frequency of freshwater plants possessing the bicarbonate use trait. We show, globally, that the frequency of plant species with this trait increases with bicarbonate concentration. Regionally, however, the frequency of bicarbonate use is reduced at sites where the CO2 concentration is substantially above the air equilibrium, consistent with this trait being an adaptation to carbon limitation. Future anthropogenic changes of bicarbonate and CO2 concentrations may alter the species compositions of freshwater plant communities.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • genome wide
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • dna methylation
  • current status