Coccolithovirus facilitation of carbon export in the North Atlantic.
Christien P LaberJonathan E HunterFilipa CarvalhoJames R CollinsElias J HunterBrittany M SchielerEmmanuel BossKuldeep MoreMiguel FradaKimberlee ThamatrakolnChristopher M BrownLiti HaramatyJustin OssolinskiHelen FredricksJozef I NissimovRebecca VandzuraUri SheynYoav LehahnRobert J ChantAna M MartinsMarco J L CoolenAssaf VardiGiacomo R DiTullioBenjamin A S Van MooyKay D BidlePublished in: Nature microbiology (2018)
Marine phytoplankton account for approximately half of global primary productivity 1 , making their fate an important driver of the marine carbon cycle. Viruses are thought to recycle more than one-quarter of oceanic photosynthetically fixed organic carbon 2 , which can stimulate nutrient regeneration, primary production and upper ocean respiration 2 via lytic infection and the 'virus shunt'. Ultimately, this limits the trophic transfer of carbon and energy to both higher food webs and the deep ocean 2 . Using imagery taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) onboard the Aqua satellite, along with a suite of diagnostic lipid- and gene-based molecular biomarkers, in situ optical sensors and sediment traps, we show that Coccolithovirus infections of mesoscale (~100 km) Emiliania huxleyi blooms in the North Atlantic are coupled with particle aggregation, high zooplankton grazing and greater downward vertical fluxes of both particulate organic and particulate inorganic carbon from the upper mixed layer. Our analyses captured blooms in different phases of infection (early, late and post) and revealed the highest export flux in 'early-infected blooms' with sinking particles being disproportionately enriched with infected cells and subsequently remineralized at depth in the mesopelagic. Our findings reveal viral infection as a previously unrecognized ecosystem process enhancing biological pump efficiency.