Zorz Jackie, Willis Ciara, Comeau André M, Langille Morgan G I, Johnson Catherine L, Li William K W, LaRoche Julie
Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Department of Geoscience, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Front Microbiol. 2019 Feb 21;10:281. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.00281. eCollection 2019.
The fundamental role of bacteria in global biogeochemical cycles warrants a thorough understanding of the factors controlling bacterial community structure. In this study, the integrated effect of seasonal differences and spatial distribution on bacterial community structure and diversity were investigated at the regional scale. We conducted a comprehensive bacterial survey, with 451 samples of the Scotian Shelf sector of the Northwest Atlantic Ocean during spring and fall of 2014 and 2016, to analyze the effects of physicochemical gradients on bacterial community structure. Throughout the region, Pelagibacteraceae and Rhodobacteraceae were the most common in the free-living fraction, while Flavobacteriia and Deltaproteobacteria were more abundant in the particle-associated fraction. Overall, there was strong covariation of the microbial community diversity from the two size fractions. This relationship existed despite the statistically significant difference in community structure between the free-living and particle-associated size fractions. In both size fractions, distribution patterns of bacterial taxa, and species within taxa, displayed temporal and spatial preferences. Distinct bacterial assemblages specific to season and depth in the water column were identified. These distinct assemblages, consistent for both 2014 and 2016, suggested replicable patterns in microbial communities for spring and fall in this region. Over all sites, temperature and oxygen values were highly correlated with community similarity, and salinity and oxygen values were the most strongly positively- and negatively correlated with alpha diversity, respectively. However, the strengths of these correlations depended on the depth and season sampled. The bathymetry of the Scotian Shelf, the abrupt shelf break to the Scotian Slope and the major ocean currents dominating in the region led to the formation of distinct on-shelf and off-shelf bacterial communities both in spring and fall. The highest species richness was observed at the shelf break, where water masses from the two major currents meet. Our study establishes the baseline for assessing future changes in the bacterial community of the Scotian Shelf waters, a rapidly changing sector of the Atlantic Ocean.
细菌在全球生物地球化学循环中的基本作用,使得有必要深入了解控制细菌群落结构的因素。在本研究中,我们在区域尺度上调查了季节差异和空间分布对细菌群落结构和多样性的综合影响。我们进行了一项全面的细菌调查,在2014年和2016年春季及秋季采集了西北大西洋斯科舍陆架区的451个样本,以分析物理化学梯度对细菌群落结构的影响。在整个区域,Pelagibacteraceae和Rhodobacteraceae在自由生活部分最为常见,而黄杆菌纲和δ变形菌纲在颗粒相关部分更为丰富。总体而言,两个大小部分的微生物群落多样性存在很强的协变关系。尽管自由生活和颗粒相关大小部分的群落结构在统计学上存在显著差异,但这种关系依然存在。在两个大小部分中,细菌分类群及其内物种的分布模式都表现出时间和空间偏好。我们识别出了特定于水柱中季节和深度的不同细菌组合。这些在2014年和2016年都一致的不同组合,表明该区域春季和秋季微生物群落存在可重复的模式。在所有站点中,温度和氧气值与群落相似性高度相关,盐度和氧气值分别与α多样性呈最强的正相关和负相关。然而,这些相关性的强度取决于采样的深度和季节。斯科舍陆架的地形、向斯科舍坡的陡峭陆架断裂以及该区域主导的主要洋流,导致春季和秋季在陆架上和陆架外形成了不同的细菌群落。在陆架断裂处,即来自两大洋流的水体交汇之处,观察到了最高的物种丰富度。我们的研究为评估斯科舍陆架水域细菌群落的未来变化奠定了基础,该区域是大西洋中快速变化的部分。