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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Kelps are globally important bioengineering species with high ecological and economic value, but are increasingly
threatened by climate-driven geographic range shifts. The inheritance of economically important traits from parents to
offspring is poorly understood in kelps but it is of utmost interest to seaweed farmers wishing to select strains with superior
performance and resilience to environmental change. For two allopatric kelp species (N-Atlantic Laminaria digitata and
S-Atlantic L. pallida), we compared the speed of gametogenesis and reproductive success in parental gametophytes, and
produced intraspecific and reciprocal interspecific crosses of female × male gametophyte parents isolated from the two
species. We then compared the upper thermal resilience of microscopic and macroscopic sibling sporophytes in an exposure
experiment over two weeks. The upper thermal limit of the sporophytes resulting from intraspecific crosses of the two
species deviated by 1°C. In contrast, sporophytes from both interspecific hybrid crosses had a 2–3°C higher upper thermal
tolerance than single species sporophytes, indicating heterosis for thermal tolerance. This phenotypic response appears
partially sex-dependent in our study, with female parents being more important in determining the thermal-response
phenotype than male parents. The presence of male gametophytes generally enhanced female reproductive success. Both
gametogenesis rate and reproductive success differed among the types of reciprocal crosses. Although the interspecific
crosses were artificial in an ecological sense, they may provide a tool for understanding the molecular basis of heterosis and
thermal tolerance in kelps (e.g. by investigating species-specific gene expression), or for aquaculture breeding
programmes against a background of rapid environmental change.
Description
Keywords
Brown alga Thermal adaptation Gametogenesis Reproductive success Heterosis Interspecific hybridization Inheritance
Citation
Publisher
Taylor & Francis