Abstract. Ecophysiological studies on Antarctic cryptophytes to assess whether
climatic changes such as ocean acidification and enhanced stratification
affect their growth in Antarctic coastal waters in the future are lacking so
far. This is the first study that investigates the combined effects of the increasing availability of pCO2 (400 and 1000 µatm) and
irradiance (20, 200 and 500 µmol photons m−2 s−1) on growth,
elemental composition and photophysiology of the Antarctic cryptophyte
Geminigera cryophila. Under ambient pCO2, this species was characterized by a pronounced
sensitivity to increasing irradiance with complete growth inhibition at the
highest light intensity. Interestingly, when grown under high pCO2 this
negative light effect vanished, and it reached the highest rates of growth and
particulate organic carbon production at the highest irradiance compared to
the other tested experimental conditions. Our results for G. cryophila reveal beneficial
effects of ocean acidification in conjunction with enhanced irradiance on
growth and photosynthesis. Hence, cryptophytes such as G. cryophila may be potential
winners of climate change, potentially thriving better in more stratified
and acidic coastal waters and contributing in higher abundance to future
phytoplankton assemblages of coastal Antarctic waters.