Unexpected functional diversity of stream biofilms within and across proglacial floodplains despite close spatial proximity

Author:

Michoud Grégoire1ORCID,Kohler Tyler J.12ORCID,Peter Hannes1ORCID,Brandani Jade1ORCID,Busi Susheel Banu3ORCID,Battin Tom J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. River Ecosystems Laboratory, Alpine and Polar Environmental Research Center Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) Lausanne Switzerland

2. Department of Ecology, Faculty of Science Charles University Prague Czechia

3. Systems Ecology Group, Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine University of Luxembourg Esch‐sur‐Alzette Luxembourg

Abstract

AbstractHigh‐mountain streams are particularly vulnerable to climate change because they intimately interface with the cryosphere. As glaciers shrink and snowpack diminishes, proglacial streams will eventually shift from being glacier‐fed to streams fed by groundwater, snowmelt and precipitation. This shift will affect both the flow regime and physico‐chemical characteristics of streams, possibly also the structure and function of their benthic microbiome. Here, we applied genome‐resolved metagenomics to benthic biofilms from glacier‐fed streams and their groundwater‐fed tributaries within three proglacial floodplains in the Swiss Alps. Despite the close spatial proximity between both stream types, their microbiome structure differed consistently for both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The glacier‐fed stream microbiome was taxonomically and functionally less diverse than its groundwater‐fed counterpart, and had smaller genomes, but with conservation of the central metabolic functions primarily related to nitrogen and sulfur cycling. Consequently, much higher functional variability was associated with the microbiome of tributary streams, mainly due to abundant genes involved in the transport and degradation of organic matter. Our findings suggest that glacier shrinkage will cause shifts in the functioning of benthic microbiomes of proglacial floodplains with yet unknown consequences for downstream biogeochemistry.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Oceanography

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