Recurrent patterns of microdiversity in a temperate coastal marine environment.
Meghan ChafeeAntonio Fernàndez-GuerraPier Luigi ButtigiegGunnar GerdtsA Murat ErenHanno TeelingRudolf I AmannPublished in: The ISME journal (2017)
Temperate coastal marine environments are replete with complex biotic and abiotic interactions that are amplified during spring and summer phytoplankton blooms. During these events, heterotrophic bacterioplankton respond to successional releases of dissolved organic matter as algal cells are lysed. Annual seasonal shifts in the community composition of free-living bacterioplankton follow broadly predictable patterns, but whether similar communities respond each year to bloom disturbance events remains unknown owing to a lack of data sets, employing high-frequency sampling over multiple years. We capture the fine-scale microdiversity of these events with weekly sampling using a high-resolution method to discriminate 16S ribosomal RNA gene amplicons that are >99% identical. Furthermore, we used 2 complete years of data to facilitate identification of recurrent sub-networks of co-varying microbes. We demonstrate that despite inter-annual variation in phytoplankton blooms and despite the dynamism of a coastal-oceanic transition zone, patterns of microdiversity are recurrent during both bloom and non-bloom conditions. Sub-networks of co-occurring microbes identified reveal that correlation structures between community members appear quite stable in a seasonally driven response to oligotrophic and eutrophic conditions.
Keyphrases
- high frequency
- high resolution
- water quality
- climate change
- heavy metals
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- mental health
- healthcare
- electronic health record
- human health
- genome wide
- big data
- induced apoptosis
- air pollution
- genome wide identification
- single cell
- copy number
- risk assessment
- gene expression
- machine learning
- cell death
- transcription factor
- endoplasmic reticulum stress