Protistan community composition and metabolism in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre: Influences of mesoscale eddies and depth

Author:

Gleich Samantha J.1ORCID,Hu Sarah K.2,Krinos Arianna I.345,Caron David A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA

2. Department of Oceanography Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

3. MIT‐WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography and Applied Ocean Science and Engineering, Cambridge and Woods Hole Cambridge Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Biology Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole Massachusetts USA

5. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Science Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractMarine protists and their metabolic activities are intricately tied to the cycling of nutrients and the flow of energy through microbial food webs. Physiochemical changes in the environment, such as those that result from mesoscale eddies, may impact protistan communities, but the effects that such changes have on protists are poorly known. A metatranscriptomic study was conducted to investigate how eddies affected protists at adjacent cyclonic and anticyclonic eddy sites in the oligotrophic ocean at four depths from 25 to 250 m. Eddy polarity impacted protists at all depths sampled, although the effects of eddy polarity were secondary to the impact of depth across the depth range. Eddy‐induced vertical shifts in the water column yielded differences in the cyclonic and anticyclonic eddy protistan communities, and these differences were the most pronounced at and just below the deep chlorophyll maximum. An analysis of transcripts associated with protistan nutritional physiology at 150 m revealed that cyclonic eddies may support a more heterotrophic community, while anticyclonic eddies promote a more phototrophic community. The results of this study indicate that eddies alter the metabolism of protists particularly in the lower euphotic zone and may therefore impact carbon export from the euphotic zone.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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