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Marine nitrogen-fixers in the Canadian Arctic Gateway are dominated by biogeographically distinct non-cyanobacterial communities.

Brent M RobicheauJennifer TolmanSonja RoseDhwani DesaiJulie LaRoche
Published in: FEMS microbiology ecology (2023)
We describe diazotrophs present during a 2015 GEOTRACES expedition through the Canadian Arctic Gateway (CAG) using nifH metabarcoding. In the less studied Labrador Sea, Bradyrhizobium sp. and Vitreoscilla sp. nifH variants were dominant, while in Baffin Bay, a Stutzerimonas stutzeri variant was dominant. In comparison, the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA) was characterized by a broader set of dominant variants belonging to Desulfobulbaceae, Desulfuromonadales, Arcobacter sp., Vibrio spp., and Sulfuriferula sp. Although dominant diazotrophs fell within known nifH Clusters I & III, only a few of these variants were frequently recovered in a 5-year weekly nifH times series in the coastal NW Atlantic presented herein, notably S. stutzeri and variants belonging to Desulfobacterales and Desulfuromonadales. In addition, the majority of dominant Arctic nifH variants shared low similarity (<92% nucleotide identities) to sequences in a global non-cyanobacterial diazotroph catalogue recently-compiled by others. We further detected UCYN-A throughout the CAG at low-levels using quantitative-PCR assays. Temperature, depth, salinity, oxygen, and nitrate were most strongly correlated to the Arctic diazotroph diversity observed, and we found a stark division between diazotroph communities of the Labrador Sea versus Baffin Bay and the CAA, hence establishing that a previously unknown biogeographic community division can occur for diazotrophs in the CAG.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • copy number
  • healthcare
  • microbial community
  • high resolution
  • escherichia coli
  • optical coherence tomography
  • mass spectrometry
  • biofilm formation
  • single cell