Sargasso Sea bacterioplankton community structure and drivers of variance as revealed by DNA metabarcoding analysis

Author:

Gill John Geoffrey1,Hill-Spanik Kristina M.1,Whittaker Kerry A.23,Jones Martin L.4,Plante Craig1

Affiliation:

1. Grice Marine Laboratory, College of Charleston, Charleston, SC, United States

2. Sea Education Association, Woods Hole, MA, United States

3. Maine Maritime Academy, Castine, Maine, United States

4. Department of Mathematics, College of Charleston, Charleston, SC, United States

Abstract

Marine microbes provide the backbone for pelagic ecosystems by cycling and fixing nutrients and establishing the base of food webs. Microbial communities are often assumed to be highly connected and genetically mixed, with localized environmental filters driving minor changes in structure. Our study applied high-throughput Illumina 16S ribosomal RNA gene amplicon sequencing on whole-community bacterial samples to characterize geographic, environmental, and stochastic drivers of community diversity. DNA was extracted from seawater collected from the surface (N = 18) and at depth just below the deep chlorophyll-a maximum (DCM mean depth = 115.4 m; N = 22) in the Sargasso Sea and adjacent oceanographic regions. Discrete bacterioplankton assemblages were observed at varying depths in the North Sargasso Sea, with a signal for distance-decay of bacterioplankton community similarity found only in surface waters. Bacterial communities from different oceanic regions could be distinguished statistically but exhibited a low magnitude of divergence. Redundancy analysis identified temperature as the key environmental variable correlated with community structuring. The effect of dispersal limitation was weak, while variation partitioning and neutral community modeling demonstrated stochastic processes influencing the communities. This study advances understanding of microbial biogeography in the pelagic ocean and highlights the use of high-throughput sequencing methods in studying microbial community structure.

Funder

College of Charleston

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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