Deciphering Connections Between the Microbial Communities of the Euphotic Zone and Sinking Particles in the Sargasso Sea

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Description
Sinking particles are important conduits of organic carbon from the euphotic zone to the deep ocean and microhabitats for diverse microbial communities, but little is known about what determines their origin and community composition. Events in the northwestern Sargasso Sea,

Sinking particles are important conduits of organic carbon from the euphotic zone to the deep ocean and microhabitats for diverse microbial communities, but little is known about what determines their origin and community composition. Events in the northwestern Sargasso Sea, such as winter convective mixing, summer stratification, and mesoscale (10–100 km) eddies, characteristic features of this region, affect the vertical and temporal composition and abundance of pelagic and particle-attached microorganisms. To assess the connections of the microbial communities between the euphotic zone and sinking particles, I carried out indicator and differential abundance analyses of prokaryotes and photoautotrophs based on the V4-V5 amplicons of the 16S rDNA from samples collected in the Sargasso Sea during the spring and summer of 2012. I found that gammaproteobacteria such as Pseudoalteromonas sp. and Vibrio sp., common particle-associated bacteria often linked with zooplankton, dominated the sequence libraries of the sinking particles. The analysis also revealed that members of Flavobacteria, particularly the fish pathogen Tenacibaculum sp., as well as Chloropicon sp. and Chloroparvula sp., among the smallest known green algae, were indicators taxa of sinking particles. The cryptophyte Teleaulax and the diatom Chaetoceros were overrepresented in the particle communities during both seasons. Interestingly, I also found that the large centric diatom, Rhizosolenia sp., generally rare in the oligotrophic Sargasso Sea, dominated photoautotrophic communities of sinking particles collected in the center of an anticyclonic eddy with unusual upwelling due to eddy-wind interactions. I hypothesize that the steady contribution by picophytoplankton to particle flux is punctuated by pulses of production and flux of larger-sized phytoplankton in response to episodic eddy upwelling events and can lead to higher export of particulate organic matter during the summer.
Date Created
2022
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