Salinity-dependent effects of seawater acidification on growth, photosynthetic physiology and biochemistry of the invasive macroalga Codium fragile

Highlights

  • Decreased and increased salinity adversely affect the growth and photosynthetic physiology of Codium fragile under ambient pCO2 conditions.
  • Ocean acidification could help Codium fragile to encounter moderate salinity stress by up-regulating photosynthetic ability.
  • The deleterious effect of progressively decreased salinity on growth of Codium fragile was magnified when pCO2 increased.

Abstract

Ocean acidification (OA) and seawater salinity are two major environmental factors that influence the growth and distribution of macroalgae in coastal ecosystems. To investigate the effects of OA and salinity on the invasive macroalga Codium fragile, the growth, Chlorophyll a fluorescence, and biochemical compositions (pigment and soluble carbohydrate contents, the superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity, and malondialdehyde (MDA) contents) were studied after exposure to two pCO2 levels (400 ppmv, LC; and 1000 ppmv, HC) and four salinity regimes (high salinity, 40 psu; control salinity, 30 psu; medium salinity, 20 psu; low salinity, 10 psu). The results showed that, except for SOD activity at 20 psu, the growth, maximum and effective quantum yield of PSII, and maximum relative electron transport, pigment and soluble carbohydrate contents, SOD activity, and the MDA content were adversely impacted by both hypo- and hypersaline under LC conditions. Similarly, under HC conditions, the growth, photosynthetic physiology and biochemistry were negatively impacted by low salinity, while high salinity enhanced pigment contents and chlorophyll fluorescence parameters but inhibited SOD activity and MDA contents. Furthermore, higher pCO2 significantly promoted growth, pigment contents, and photosynthetic performance at 20 and 40 psu, while it amplified the depression in growth at 10 psu. These findings suggest that OA may enhance the potential invasive ability and salinity tolerance of C. fragile under medium hyposaline and hypersaline conditions by alleviating the negative effects of salinity stress on growth, photosynthesis, and pigments synthesis. However, it may also synergistically reduce algal growth at further reduced salinity. These data collected herein are valuable for understanding C. fragile cultivation and predicting its future distribution in response to changing ocean conditions.

Chu Y., Shi Y., Xue Y., He L., Li X., Shi X., Kuang Y., Chen X. & Zhao C., 2025. Salinity-dependent effects of seawater acidification on growth, photosynthetic physiology and biochemistry of the invasive macroalga Codium fragileAlgal Research: 104010. doi: 10.1016/j.algal.2025.104010. Article (subscription required).


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