Dynamic bacterial and viral response to an algal bloom at subzero temperatures

被引:124
作者
Yager, PL [1 ]
Connelly, TL
Mortazavi, B
Wommack, KE
Bano, N
Bauer, JE
Opsahl, S
Hollibaugh, JT
机构
[1] Univ Georgia, Sch Marine Programs, Athens, GA 30602 USA
[2] Florida State Univ, Dept Oceanog, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA
[3] Univ Delaware, Delaware Biotechnol Inst, Newark, DE 19711 USA
[4] Univ Georgia, Sch Marine Programs, Athens, GA 30602 USA
[5] Coll William & Mary, Sch Marine Sci, Gloucester Point, VA 23062 USA
[6] Joseph W Jones Ecol Res Ctr, Newton, GA 31770 USA
关键词
D O I
10.4319/lo.2001.46.4.0790
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
New evidence suggests that cold-loving (psychrophilic) bacteria may be a dynamic component of the episodic bloom events of high-latitude ecosystems. Here we report the results of an unusually early springtime study of pelagic microbial activity in the coastal Alaskan Arctic. Heterotrophic bacterioplankton clearly responded to an algal bloom by doubling cell size, increasing the fraction of actively respiring cells (up to an unprecedented 84% metabolically active using redox dye CTC), shifting substrate-uptake capabilities from kinetic parameters better adapted to lower substrate concentrations to those more suited for higher concentrations, and more than doubling cell abundance. Community composition (determined by polymerase chain reaction/DGGE and nucleotide sequence analysis) also shifted over the bloom. Results support, for the first time with modern molecular methods, previous culture-based observations of bacterial community succession during Arctic algal blooms and confirm that previously observed variability in pelagic microbial activity can be linked to changes in community structure. During early bloom stages, virioplankton and bacterial abundance were comparable, suggesting that mortality due to phage infection was low at that time. The virus-to-bacteria ratio (VBR) increased 10-fold at the height of the bloom, however, suggesting an increased potential for bacterioplankton mortality resulting from viral infection. The peak in VER coincided with observed shifts in both microbial activity and community structure. These early-season data suggest that substrate and virioplankton interactions may control the active microbial carbon cycling of this region.
引用
收藏
页码:790 / 801
页数:12
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