Säwström Christin, Hyndes Glenn A, Eyre Bradley D, Huggett Megan J, Fraser Matthew W, Lavery Paul S, Thomson Paul G, Tarquinio Flavia, Steinberg Peter D, Laverock Bonnie
School of Science Centre for Marine Ecosystems Research Edith Cowan University Joondalup WA Australia.
School of Environment Science and Engineering Centre for Coastal Biogeochemistry Research Southern Cross University Lismore NSW Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2016 Aug 29;6(18):6662-6671. doi: 10.1002/ece3.2408. eCollection 2016 Sep.
The transfer of organic material from one coastal environment to another can increase production in recipient habitats in a process known as spatial subsidy. Microorganisms drive the generation, transformation, and uptake of organic material in shallow coastal environments, but their significance in connecting coastal habitats through spatial subsidies has received limited attention. We address this by presenting a conceptual model of coastal connectivity that focuses on the flow of microbially mediated organic material in key coastal habitats. Our model suggests that it is not the difference in generation rates of organic material between coastal habitats but the amount of organic material assimilated into microbial biomass and respiration that determines the amount of material that can be exported from one coastal environment to another. Further, the flow of organic material across coastal habitats is sensitive to environmental change as this can alter microbial remineralization and respiration rates. Our model highlights microorganisms as an integral part of coastal connectivity and emphasizes the importance of including a microbial perspective in coastal connectivity studies.
有机物质从一个沿海环境转移到另一个沿海环境,这一过程被称为空间补贴,它能够提高接受栖息地的生产力。微生物驱动着浅海沿海环境中有机物质的产生、转化和吸收,然而它们在通过空间补贴连接沿海栖息地方面的重要性却很少受到关注。我们通过提出一个沿海连通性的概念模型来解决这一问题,该模型聚焦于关键沿海栖息地中微生物介导的有机物质流动。我们的模型表明,决定从一个沿海环境输出到另一个沿海环境的物质数量的,并非沿海栖息地之间有机物质产生速率的差异,而是同化到微生物生物量和呼吸作用中的有机物质数量。此外,沿海栖息地之间有机物质的流动对环境变化很敏感,因为这会改变微生物的再矿化和呼吸速率。我们的模型突出了微生物是沿海连通性不可或缺的一部分,并强调了在沿海连通性研究中纳入微生物视角的重要性。