| Literature DB >> 29675703 |
Víctor Hernando-Morales1,2, Marta M Varela3, David M Needham4, Jacob Cram4,5, Jed A Fuhrman4, Eva Teira6,7.
Abstract
Analysis of seasonal patterns of marine bacterial community structure along horizontal and vertical spatial scales can help to predict long-term responses to climate change. Several recent studies have shown predictable seasonal reoccurrence of bacterial assemblages. However, only a few have assessed temporal variability over both horizontal and vertical spatial scales. Here, we simultaneously studied the bacterial community structure at two different locations and depths in shelf waters of a coastal upwelling system during an annual cycle. The most noticeable biogeographic patterns observed were seasonality, horizontal homogeneity, and spatial synchrony in bacterial diversity and community structure related with regional upwelling-downwelling dynamics. Water column mixing eventually disrupted bacterial community structure vertical heterogeneity. Our results are consistent with previous temporal studies of marine bacterioplankton in other temperate regions and also suggest a marked influence of regional factors on the bacterial communities inhabiting this coastal upwelling system. Bacterial-mediated carbon fluxes in this productive region appear to be mainly controlled by community structure dynamics in surface waters, and local environmental factors at the base of the euphotic zone.Entities:
Keywords: ARISA; Bacterioplankton community; Spatial and temporal variability; Spatial synchrony; Upwelling-downwelling
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29675703 DOI: 10.1007/s00248-018-1179-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Ecol ISSN: 0095-3628 Impact factor: 4.552