Substrate availability may limit the response of tropical bacterioplankton biomass to warming

Author:

Morán Xosé Anxelu G.12ORCID,Calleja Maria Ll.13ORCID,Baltar Federico45ORCID,Silva Luis16ORCID,Ansari Mohd Ikram17,de Albornoz Paloma Carrillo18,Duarte Carlos M.19ORCID,Lønborg Christian1011ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Red Sea Research Center (RSRC), King Abdullah University of Science and Technology Thuwal Saudi Arabia

2. Centro Oceanográfico de Gijón/Xixón (IEO‐CSIC) Gijón/Xixón Spain

3. Marine Ecology and Systematics, Department of Biology Universitat de les Illes Balears Palma Spain

4. Department of Marine Science University of Otago Dunedin New Zealand

5. Department of Functional and Evolutionary Ecology University of Vienna Vienna Austria

6. The Red Sea Developmental Company Riyadh Saudi Arabia

7. Department of Biosciences Integral University Lucknow India

8. Centro Oceanográfico de Santander (IEO‐CSIC) Santander Spain

9. Computational Bioscience Research Center (CBRC), King Abdullah University of Science and Technology Thuwal Saudi Arabia

10. Australian Institute of Marine Science Townsville Australia

11. Department of Ecoscience Aarhus University Roskilde Denmark

Abstract

AbstractThe response of heterotrophic bacterioplankton to the addition of macrophytic dissolved organic matter (DOM) and temperature was investigated in the Red Sea. We added 40 μmol C L−1 of leachates obtained from seagrass and mangrove leaves to natural bacterial communities, incubated them at three temperatures (25.5°C found in situ plus 3°C below and above that value) and monitored the microbial and biogeochemical responses over 4 d. Seagrass and mangrove DOM, important allochthonous sources in tropical oligotrophic regions, had distinct chemical characteristics compared to unamended seawater, with mangrove substrates containing comparatively more nitrogen and protein‐like fluorescent DOM than seagrass. Specific growth rates (μ) increased twofold in the seagrass and mangrove treatments (1.0 and 0.8 d−1, respectively) relative to the seawater control (0.4 d−1). The biomass of heterotrophic bacteria generally reflected μ changes, reaching maximum values of 16.8 and 17.3 μg C L−1 in the seagrass and mangrove treatments, respectively, compared to just 2.6 μg C L−1 in seawater. The increase in μ values due to experimental warming followed the metabolic theory of ecology, mostly because of enhanced exoenzymatic activity, while cell size decreased as predicted by the temperature–size rule (mean −3% per °C increase). Although the labile nature of the specific seagrass and mangrove DOM leachates was clearly demonstrated, we conclude that tropical heterotrophic bacteria may have limited capability to increase their biomass as a consequence of future warming, even in the presence of high loadings of macrophytic DOM.

Funder

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

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