As the effects of the Global Climate Changes on the costal regions of Central and South Americas advance, there is proportionally little research being made to understand such impacts. This commentary puts forward a series of propositions of strategies to improve performance of Central and South American science and policy making in order to cope with the future impacts of the Global Climate Changes in their coastal habitats.
The effects of UVB radiation on the growth of macroalgal thalli were evaluated using tetrasporophytic fronds of the Rhodophytes Gigartina skottsbergii, Sarcothalia crispata and Mazzaella laminarioides. The tetrasporophytic fronds were collected from nature and the tetrasporophyte sporelings grown in a temperature regulated chamber at 8 ± 2 • C with a 12L:12D (Light: Dark) photoperiod, Photosynthetically Active Radiation (PAR) of 55 μmol photons m −2 s −1 and seawater enriched with 20 mL L −1 of Provasoli medium. We exposed the thalli of these macroalgae to PAR (55 μmol photons m −2 s −1 ) and three treatments using a combination of PAR with three different levels of UVB radiation (0.10, 0.15 and 0.23 W m −2 for G. skottsbergii and S. crispata and 0.02, 0.05 and 0.10 W m −2 for M. laminarioides) during a period of 71 days. Growth of thalli was quantified by measuring their length using digitized photographs of samples.Important differences were detected in the growth of individuals cultured under the effects of UVB radiation, when compared to the control (i.e. plants exposed to PAR only). In the case of G. skottsbergii and S. crispata higher levels of UVB radiation resulted in slower growth of thalli. In nearly all measurements for the first two species, UVB radiation levels of 0.1 W m −2 induced differences in thallus growth, while for M. laminarioides levels of UVB radiation of 0.1 W m −2 were effective only after a prolonged period of exposure.Differential effects of UVB radiation on G. skottsbergii, S. crispata and M. laminarioides could interfere with the natural populations of these economically important macroalgal species in southern Chile, where they occur under the annual influence of the Antarctic Ozone Hole and the general thinning of the ozone layer.
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