Angly Florent E, Heath Candice, Morgan Thomas C, Tonin Hemerson, Rich Virginia, Schaffelke Britta, Bourne David G, Tyson Gene W
Australian Centre for Ecogenomics, University of Queensland , St Lucia, Queensland , Australia.
Australian Institute of Marine Science , Townsville, Queensland , Australia.
PeerJ. 2016 Jan 5;4:e1511. doi: 10.7717/peerj.1511. eCollection 2016.
The role of microorganisms in maintaining coral reef health is increasingly recognized. Riverine floodwater containing herbicides and excess nutrients from fertilizers compromises water quality in the inshore Great Barrier Reef (GBR), with unknown consequences for planktonic marine microbial communities and thus coral reefs. In this baseline study, inshore GBR microbial communities were monitored along a 124 km long transect between 2011 and 2013 using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Members of the bacterial orders Rickettsiales (e.g., Pelagibacteraceae) and Synechococcales (e.g., Prochlorococcus), and of the archaeal class Marine Group II were prevalent in all samples, exhibiting a clear seasonal dynamics. Microbial communities near the Tully river mouth included a mixture of taxa from offshore marine sites and from the river system. The environmental parameters collected could be summarized into four groups, represented by salinity, rainfall, temperature and water quality, that drove the composition of microbial communities. During the wet season, lower salinity and a lower water quality index resulting from higher river discharge corresponded to increases in riverine taxa at sites near the river mouth. Particularly large, transient changes in microbial community structure were seen during the extreme wet season 2010-11, and may be partially attributed to the effects of wind and waves, which resuspend sediments and homogenize the water column in shallow near-shore regions. This work shows that anthropogenic floodwaters and other environmental parameters work in conjunction to drive the spatial distribution of microorganisms in the GBR lagoon, as well as their seasonal and daily dynamics.
微生物在维持珊瑚礁健康方面的作用日益受到认可。含有除草剂和来自化肥的过量养分的河流洪水会损害大堡礁(GBR)近岸海域的水质,对浮游海洋微生物群落以及珊瑚礁产生未知影响。在这项基线研究中,2011年至2013年间,利用16S rRNA基因扩增子测序沿着一条124公里长的断面监测了大堡礁近岸微生物群落。立克次氏体目(例如,Pelagibacteraceae)和聚球藻目(例如,原绿球藻属)的细菌成员以及海洋第二类群的古菌在所有样本中都很普遍,呈现出明显的季节动态。塔利河口附近的微生物群落包括来自近海海洋区域和河流系统的混合分类群。收集到的环境参数可归纳为四组,分别以盐度、降雨量、温度和水质为代表,这些参数驱动着微生物群落的组成。在雨季,较低的盐度和因河流流量增加导致的较低水质指数与河口附近站点河流分类群的增加相对应。在2010 - 2011年极端雨季期间,微生物群落结构出现了特别大的、短暂的变化,这可能部分归因于风浪的影响,风浪会使沉积物重新悬浮并使近岸浅水区的水柱均匀化。这项研究表明,人为洪水和其他环境参数共同作用,驱动了大堡礁泻湖微生物的空间分布及其季节和日常动态。