Thermally Primed Zostera muelleri Seeds Exhibit Higher Germination Rates Than Those From Ambient Conditions

ABSTRACT Seagrasses provide critical ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration, sediment stabilisation and nursery habitat for juvenile fish. Zostera muelleri is ubiquitous within Australian and New Zealand estuaries, however, as a species is relatively understudied. We sourced seeds from a th...

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Main Authors: Tom Moir, Megan J. Huggett, Timothy M. Smith, Troy F. Gaston
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-10-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70362
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author Tom Moir
Megan J. Huggett
Timothy M. Smith
Troy F. Gaston
author_facet Tom Moir
Megan J. Huggett
Timothy M. Smith
Troy F. Gaston
author_sort Tom Moir
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Seagrasses provide critical ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration, sediment stabilisation and nursery habitat for juvenile fish. Zostera muelleri is ubiquitous within Australian and New Zealand estuaries, however, as a species is relatively understudied. We sourced seeds from a thermally affected east Australian estuary and investigated whether germination rates differed between ambient and thermally affected seeds over a variety of temperatures (16°C–28°C) to determine how seagrass systems might react in a warming climate. Germination for the experiment was low and totalled 5% of all seeds; however, similar numbers are typical in seed germination studies. Germination was highest at 16°C and was enhanced through the simulation of a 48‐h freshwater pulse. Thermally affected sites germinated faster and had greater mean maximum germination when compared to control sites regardless of experimental temperature. These findings indicate that Z. muelleri in this system may be exhibiting transgenerational plasticity due to the thermal stress the parent experiences. This result provides an alternate viewpoint to the current literature by suggesting that unknown transgenerational effects may provide Z. muelleri with greater germination plasticity against temperatures expected under predicted climate change scenarios than previously expected.
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series Ecology and Evolution
spelling doaj-art-04c9358375c44ee19dcf4af067c6ecb72024-12-20T09:05:58ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582024-10-011410n/an/a10.1002/ece3.70362Thermally Primed Zostera muelleri Seeds Exhibit Higher Germination Rates Than Those From Ambient ConditionsTom Moir0Megan J. Huggett1Timothy M. Smith2Troy F. Gaston3School of Environmental and Life Sciences University of Newcastle Ourimbah New South Wales AustraliaSchool of Environmental and Life Sciences University of Newcastle Ourimbah New South Wales AustraliaCentre for Tropical Water & Aquatic Ecosystem Research James Cook University Cairns Queensland AustraliaSchool of Environmental and Life Sciences University of Newcastle Ourimbah New South Wales AustraliaABSTRACT Seagrasses provide critical ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration, sediment stabilisation and nursery habitat for juvenile fish. Zostera muelleri is ubiquitous within Australian and New Zealand estuaries, however, as a species is relatively understudied. We sourced seeds from a thermally affected east Australian estuary and investigated whether germination rates differed between ambient and thermally affected seeds over a variety of temperatures (16°C–28°C) to determine how seagrass systems might react in a warming climate. Germination for the experiment was low and totalled 5% of all seeds; however, similar numbers are typical in seed germination studies. Germination was highest at 16°C and was enhanced through the simulation of a 48‐h freshwater pulse. Thermally affected sites germinated faster and had greater mean maximum germination when compared to control sites regardless of experimental temperature. These findings indicate that Z. muelleri in this system may be exhibiting transgenerational plasticity due to the thermal stress the parent experiences. This result provides an alternate viewpoint to the current literature by suggesting that unknown transgenerational effects may provide Z. muelleri with greater germination plasticity against temperatures expected under predicted climate change scenarios than previously expected.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70362climate changeestuaryseagrassseed germinationthermal effectsZostera
spellingShingle Tom Moir
Megan J. Huggett
Timothy M. Smith
Troy F. Gaston
Thermally Primed Zostera muelleri Seeds Exhibit Higher Germination Rates Than Those From Ambient Conditions
Ecology and Evolution
climate change
estuary
seagrass
seed germination
thermal effects
Zostera
title Thermally Primed Zostera muelleri Seeds Exhibit Higher Germination Rates Than Those From Ambient Conditions
title_full Thermally Primed Zostera muelleri Seeds Exhibit Higher Germination Rates Than Those From Ambient Conditions
title_fullStr Thermally Primed Zostera muelleri Seeds Exhibit Higher Germination Rates Than Those From Ambient Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Thermally Primed Zostera muelleri Seeds Exhibit Higher Germination Rates Than Those From Ambient Conditions
title_short Thermally Primed Zostera muelleri Seeds Exhibit Higher Germination Rates Than Those From Ambient Conditions
title_sort thermally primed zostera muelleri seeds exhibit higher germination rates than those from ambient conditions
topic climate change
estuary
seagrass
seed germination
thermal effects
Zostera
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70362
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AT meganjhuggett thermallyprimedzosteramuelleriseedsexhibithighergerminationratesthanthosefromambientconditions
AT timothymsmith thermallyprimedzosteramuelleriseedsexhibithighergerminationratesthanthosefromambientconditions
AT troyfgaston thermallyprimedzosteramuelleriseedsexhibithighergerminationratesthanthosefromambientconditions