Seasonal development of a tidal mixing front drives shifts in community structure and diversity of bacterioplankton

Author:

King Nathan G.12ORCID,Wilmes Sophie‐B2,Browett Samuel S.34,Healey Amy5,McDevitt Allan D.6,McKeown Niall J.5,Roche Ronan2,Skujina Ilze57,Smale Dan A.1,Thorpe Jamie M.2,Malham Shelagh2

Affiliation:

1. Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, The Laboratory Plymouth UK

2. Centre of Applied Marine Sciences, School of Ocean Sciences Bangor University Menai Bridge UK

3. Environment and Ecosystem Research Centre, School of Science, Engineering and Environment University of Salford Salford UK

4. Molecular Ecology Research Group, Eco‐Innovation Research Centre, School of Science and Computing South East Technological University Waterford Ireland

5. Department of Life Sciences Aberystwyth University Aberystwyth UK

6. Department of Natural Resources and Environment Atlantic Technological University Galway Ireland

7. School of Biology and Environmental Science University College Dublin Dublin Ireland

Abstract

AbstractBacterioplankton underpin biogeochemical cycles and an improved understanding of the patterns and drivers of variability in their distribution is needed to determine their wider functioning and importance. Sharp environmental gradients and dispersal barriers associated with ocean fronts are emerging as key determinants of bacterioplankton biodiversity patterns. We examined how the development of the Celtic Sea Front (CF), a tidal mixing front on the Northwest European Shelf affects bacterioplankton communities. We performed 16S‐rRNA metabarcoding on 60 seawater samples collected from three depths (surface, 20 m and seafloor), across two research cruises (May and September 2018), encompassing the intra‐annual range of the CF intensity. Communities above the thermocline of stratified frontal waters were clearly differentiated and less diverse than those below the thermocline and communities in the well‐mixed waters of the Irish Sea. This effect was much more pronounced in September, when the CF was at its peak intensity. The stratified zone likely represents a stressful environment for bacterioplankton due to a combination of high temperatures and low nutrients, which fewer taxa can tolerate. Much of the observed variation was driven by Synechococcus spp. (cyanobacteria), which were more abundant within the stratified zone and are known to thrive in warm oligotrophic waters. Synechococcus spp. are key contributors to global primary productivity and carbon cycling and, as such, variability driven by the CF is likely to influence regional biogeochemical processes. However, further studies are required to explicitly link shifts in community structure to function and quantify their wider importance to pelagic ecosystems.

Funder

European Regional Development Fund

UK Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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