Affiliation:
1. Department of Earth, Marine and Environmental Sciences The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill NC USA
2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Lehigh University Bethlehem PA USA
3. Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment University of Oldenburg Oldenburg Germany
4. Deep‐Sea Ecology and Technology, Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research Bremerhaven Germany
Abstract
AbstractThe availability of alginate, an abundant macroalgal polysaccharide, induces compositional and functional responses among marine microbes, but these dynamics have not been characterized across the Pacific Ocean. We investigated alginate‐induced compositional and functional shifts (e.g., heterotrophic production, glucose turnover, hydrolytic enzyme activities) of microbial communities in the South Subtropical, Equatorial, and Polar Frontal North Pacific in mesocosms. We observed that shifts in response to alginate were site‐specific. In the South Subtropical Pacific, prokaryotic cell counts, glucose turnover, and peptidase activities changed the most with alginate addition, along with the enrichment of the widest range of particle‐associated taxa (161 amplicon sequence variants; ASVs) belonging to Alteromonadaceae, Rhodobacteraceae, Phormidiaceae, and Pseudoalteromonadaceae. Some of these taxa were detected at other sites but only enriched in the South Pacific. In the Equatorial Pacific, glucose turnover and heterotrophic prokaryotic production increased most rapidly; a single Alteromonas taxon dominated (60% of the community) but remained low (<2%) elsewhere. In the North Pacific, the particle‐associated community response to alginate was gradual, with a more limited range of alginate‐enriched taxa (82 ASVs). Thus, alginate‐related ecological and biogeochemical shifts depend on a combination of factors that include the ability to utilize alginate, environmental conditions, and microbial interactions.
Funder
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung
Division of Ocean Sciences
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Cited by
1 articles.
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