FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI Shifts in growth light optima among diatom species support their succession during the spring bloom in the Arctic BT AF Croteau, D. Lacour, Thomas Schiffrine, N. Morin, P.I. Forget, M.‐H. Bruyant, F. Ferland, J. Lafond, A. Campbell, D. A. Tremblay, J.‐E. Babin, M. Lavaud, Johann AS 1:1,2;2:2,3;3:2,4;4:2;5:2;6:2;7:2,5;8:6;9:7;10:2;11:2;12:2,8; FF 1:;2:PDG-ODE-PHYTOX-PHYSALG;3:;4:;5:;6:;7:;8:;9:;10:;11:;12:; C1 Institut de Biologie Physico‐Chimique, Laboratory of Chloroplast Biology and Light Sensing in Microalgae, UMR7141 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Sorbonne Université, 75005 Paris, France Takuvik International Research Laboratory Université Laval (Canada) ‐ CNRS (France) IRL3376, Pavillon Alexandre‐Vachon, 1045 av. de la Médecine, local 2064, G1V 0A6 Québec, Canada IFREMER Unité PHYTOX, Laboratoire PHYSALG, F‐44311 Nantes, France Institut des sciences de la mer de Rimouski (ISMER) Université du Québec à Rimouski Rimouski, Québec G5L 3A1 , Canada Ministère de l'Environnement et de la Lutte contre les changements climatiques (MELCC), Québec , Canada Aix‐Marseille University Université de Toulon CNRS, IRD, MIO, UM 110, 13288 Marseille, France Biology Department Mount Allison University E4L 1G7, Sackville NB, Canada UMR6539 LEMAR‐Laboratoire des Sciences de l’Environnement Marin, CNRS/Univ Brest/Ifremer/IRD, Institut Européen de la Mer, Technopôle Brest‐Iroise, rue Dumont d’Urville, 29280 Plouzané, France C2 UNIV SORBONNE, FRANCE UNIV LAVAL, CANADA IFREMER, FRANCE UNIV QUEBEC (UQAR-ISMER), CANADA MINIST ENVIR CHANG CLIM MELCC, CANADA UNIV AIX MARSEILLE, FRANCE UNIV MOUNT ALLISON, CANADA CNRS, FRANCE SI NANTES SE PDG-ODE-PHYTOX-PHYSALG UM LEMAR IN WOS Ifremer UPR WOS Cotutelle UMR copubli-france copubli-univ-france copubli-int-hors-europe IF 5.5 TC 10 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00759/87135/92635.pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00759/87135/92636.pdf LA English DT Article DE ;Arctic Ocean;diatoms;ecophysiology;photoacclimation;photoadaptation;primary production;seasonal species succession;spring bloom AB 1. Diatoms of the Arctic Ocean annually experience extreme changes of light environment linked to photoperiodic cycles and seasonal variations of the snow and sea-ice cover extent and thickness which attenuate light penetration in the water column. Arctic diatom communities exploit this complex seasonal dynamic through a well-documented species succession during spring, beginning in sea-ice and culminating in massive phytoplankton blooms underneath sea-ice and in the marginal ice zone. The pattern of diatom taxa sequentially dominating this succession is relatively well conserved interannually, and taxonomic shifts seem to align with habitat transitions. 2. To understand whether differential photoadaptation strategies among diatom taxa explain these recurring succession sequences, we coupled lab experiments with field work in Baffin Bay at 67.5°N. Based on field data, we selected five diatom species typical of different ecological niches and measured their growth rates under light intensity ranges representative of their natural habitats. To characterize their photoacclimative responses, we sampled pigments and total particulate carbon, and conducted 14C-uptake photosynthesis response curves and variable fluorescence measurements. 3. We documented a gradient in species respective light intensity for maximal growth suggesting divergent light response plasticity, which for the most part align with species sequential dominance. Other photophysiological parameters supported this ecophysiological framing, although contrasts were always clear only between succession endmembers, Nitzschia frigida and Chaetoceros neogracilis. To validate that these photoacclimative responses are representative of in situ dynamics, we compared them to the chlorophyll a-specific light-limited slope (α*) and saturated rate of photosynthesis (P*M), monitored in Baffin Bay on sea-ice and planktonic communities. This complementary approach confirmed that unusual responses in α* and P*M as a function of light history intensity are similar between sentinel sympagic species N. frigida and natural ice-core communities. While no light-history-dependent trends were observed in planktonic communities, their α* and P*M values were in the range of measurements from our monospecific cultures. 4. Synthesis. Our results suggest that Arctic diatoms species photoadaptation strategy is tuned to the light environment of the habitats in which they dominate and indeed drives the seasonal taxonomic succession. PY 2022 PD JUL SO Journal Of Ecology SN 0022-0477 PU Wiley VL 110 IS 6 UT 000782673000001 BP 1356 EP 1375 DI 10.1111/1365-2745.13874 ID 87135 ER EF