Warm and cool-edge populations reveal high resilience of seagrass
(Posidonia oceanica) to warming
Abstract
Disentangling spatial variation in climate change impacts is a pressing
challenge. Here we compared the performance of Posidonia oceanica
seagrass populations to temperature, throughout a year-long
translocation experiment across 2800 km in the Mediterranean Sea.
Transplants in central and warm-edge locations experienced temperatures
>29 ºC during summer, representing thermal anomalies
>5ºC above long-term maxima for cool-edge populations,
1.5ºC for central and <1ºC for warm-edge populations. At the
onset of the experiment, a highly selective herbivory event removed 75%
of cool-to-warm transplant biomass but left adjacent central and
warm-edge treatments intact. Despite big differences in thermal stress
and acute herbivory, cool-edge populations recovered and matched
warm-edge populations across all performance metrics. Central
populations displayed significantly lower growth and survivorship in
response to thermal stress. Our findings reveal that intraspecific
variation in thermal performance does not necessarily reflect thermal
geography and suggest greater resilience to warming for Posidonia
oceanica than previously recognised.