New niches for larger phytoplankton in a warmer, more resource-limited ocean

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Abstract

Warming and nutrient limitation are major stressors that affect primary production in the ocean, with cascading impacts on the food web. Yet, we lack a mechanistic understanding of how phytoplankton manage the combined stress of heat-damage and nutrient-limitation and the implications of these responses for phytoplankton biogeography. By combining theory, proteome allocation modeling, and climate projections, we identified two potential competing strategies for multi-stressor growth: (1) increase growth temperature optima through higher nutrient uptake efficiency and smaller cells, or (2) invest in heat-mitigation mechanisms achieving higher thermal tolerance at the cost of growth and larger cells. By simulating the optimal metabolic strategies of different phytoplankton functional types across a latitudinal gradient, we found that cyanobacteria are more vulnerable in warmer tropical regions due to greater heat sensitivity and lower storage capacity, indicating a potential ecological niche for larger phytoplankton, such as diatoms, in a warming ocean. Our findings challenge the current understanding that the smallest phytoplankton should prevail across the global ocean as the climate warms.

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