Literature DB >> 31636366

Transient exposure to novel high temperatures reshapes coastal phytoplankton communities.

Joshua D Kling1, Michael D Lee2, Feixue Fu1, Megan D Phan1, Xinwei Wang1,3, Pingping Qu1, David A Hutchins4.   

Abstract

Average sea surface temperatures are expected to rise 4° this century, and marine phytoplankton and bacterial community composition, biogeochemical rates, and trophic interactions are all expected to change in a future warmer ocean. Thermal experiments typically use constant temperatures; however, weather and hydrography cause marine temperatures to fluctuate on diel cycles and over multiple days. We incubated natural communities of phytoplankton collected from California coastal waters during spring, summer, and fall under present-day and future mean temperatures, using thermal treatments that were either constant or fluctuated on a 48 h cycle. As assayed by marker-gene sequencing, the emergent microbial communities were consistent within each season, except when culture temperatures exceeded the highest temperature recorded in a 10-year local thermal dataset. When temperature treatments exceeded the 10-year maximum the phytoplankton community shifted, becoming dominated by diatom amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) not seen at lower temperatures. When mean temperatures were above the 10-year maximum, constant and fluctuating regimes each selected for different ASVs. These findings suggest coastal microbial communities are largely adapted to the current range of temperatures they experience. They also suggest a general hypothesis whereby multiyear upper temperature limits may represent thresholds, beyond which large community restructurings may occur. Now inevitable future temperature increases that exceed these environmental thresholds, even temporarily, may fundamentally reshape marine microbial communities and therefore the biogeochemical cycles that they mediate.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31636366      PMCID: PMC6976607          DOI: 10.1038/s41396-019-0525-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ISME J        ISSN: 1751-7362            Impact factor:   10.302


  32 in total

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Authors:  David A Hutchins; Feixue Fu
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Journal:  Science       Date:  2012-10-25       Impact factor: 47.728

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Authors:  Colin T Kremer; Samuel B Fey; Aldo A Arellano; David A Vasseur
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2018-01-10       Impact factor: 5.349

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Authors:  Ina Benner; Rachel E Diner; Stephane C Lefebvre; Dian Li; Tomoko Komada; Edward J Carpenter; Jonathon H Stillman
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9.  Intraspecific variability in the response of bloom-forming marine microalgae to changed climate conditions.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-05-21       Impact factor: 3.240

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  3 in total

1.  Gradient Internal Standard Method for Absolute Quantification of Microbial Amplicon Sequencing Data.

Authors:  Shilei Wang; Qun Wu; Ying Han; Rubing Du; Xiaoyong Wang; Yao Nie; Xiaowei Du; Yan Xu
Journal:  mSystems       Date:  2021-01-12       Impact factor: 6.496

2.  Temperature variability interacts with mean temperature to influence the predictability of microbial phenotypes.

Authors:  Fei-Xue Fu; Bernhard Tschitschko; David A Hutchins; Michaela E Larsson; Kirralee G Baker; Allison McInnes; Tim Kahlke; Arjun Verma; Shauna A Murray; Martina A Doblin
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 13.211

3.  Environmental stability impacts the differential sensitivity of marine microbiomes to increases in temperature and acidity.

Authors:  Zhao Wang; Despina Tsementzi; Tiffany C Williams; Doris L Juarez; Sara K Blinebry; Nathan S Garcia; Brooke K Sienkiewicz; Konstantinos T Konstantinidis; Zackary I Johnson; Dana E Hunt
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2020-09-04       Impact factor: 10.302

  3 in total

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