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11/15/2023 11:13

Heated bay outside Sweden’s east cost potentially shows how ecosystems are affected by future global warming

Press contact at lnu.se: Ulrika Bergström +46 480-49 70 55 Mobile phone: +46 70-259 36 29 Kommunikationsavdelningen / Communications Department
Schwedischer Forschungsrat - The Swedish Research Council

    Research at a long-term heated bay near Oskarshamn provides a rare insight into how the Baltic Sea’s coastal areas will be affected by climate change. Here, cooling water from the nearby nuclear power plant has raised the average temperature by on average five degrees Celsius for 50 years. New research shows that this prolonged warming stresses key bacteria and makes the ecosystem more vulnerable.

    The combination of a warmer and more volatile climate expected in the Baltic Sea’s coastal areas in the future spells trouble for the bacterial communities living in the seabed sediments, whose functions are crucial for maintaining stability in the ecosystem.

    When the average temperature increases, the bacteria lose their ability to adapt to sudden temperature changes, such as heatwaves, according to a new experimental study published in the prestigious journal ISME Journal.

    “Despite the fact that it has been 50 years since the temperature was raised in the bay, the bacterial communities we study have not fully adapted to the warmer climate. They are under constant stress, which makes them less good at handling sudden temperature differences”, say Anders Forsman, Professor at the Department of Biology and Environmental Science and one of the co-authors of the study.

    Simulating future weather phenomena
    In the study, researchers examined how microorganisms living in the sediment of the long-term heated bay react to simulated heatwaves in a laboratory environment. For nine days, samples were exposed to temperatures between 6 and 35 degrees Celsius, while the activity in the bacterial communities was studied in detail. The patterns were compared with samples from a nearby unaffected bay that was also included in the experiment.

    “Much of the research on the effects of climate change in aquatic environments has been conducted in a laboratory environment with individual or a few species studied in detail. The long-term warming in this bay allows us to study an entire ecosystem in a realistic future scenario”, Professor and co-author Mark Dopson says.

    The results show that the composition, species richness, and productivity of bacterial communities from the heated bay do not respond to temperature in the same way as in the adjacent bay, where the average temperature is more normal. One reason is that the bacteria are resource limited.


    Contact for scientific information:

    Contact
    Anders Forsman, professor, +46 480-44 61 73, anders.forsman@lnu.se
    Mark Dobson, professor, +46480-44 73 34, mark.dopson@lnu.se


    Original publication:

    Studie Climate change related warming reduces thermal sensitivity and modifies metabolic activity of coastal benthic bacterial communities. ISME J 17:855-869
    Studie Weakened resilience of benthic microbial communities in the face of climate change. ISME Commun 2: 21


    More information:

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41396-023-01395-z#Abs1
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s43705-022-00104-9
    https://lnu.se/en/research/research-projects/project-baltic-sea-bays-exposed-to-...
    https://lnu.se/en/meet-linnaeus-university/current/news/2023/stressed-bacteria-s...


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    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists
    Environment / ecology
    transregional, national
    Research results
    English


     

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