Persistent Core Populations Shape the Microbiome Throughout the Water Column in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre
Author(s)
DeLong, Edward Francis
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Marine microbial communities are responsible for many important ecosystem processes in the oceans. Their variability across time and depths is well recognized, but mostly at a coarse-grained taxonomic resolution. To gain a deeper perspective onecological patterns of bacterioplankton diversity in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, we characterized bacterioplankton communities throughout the water column at a fine-grained taxonomic level with a focus on temporally persistent (core) populations.Considerable intra-clade microdiversity was evident in virtually every microbial cladeexamined. While some of the most abundant populations comprised only a small fraction of the intra-clade microdiversity, they formed a temporally persistent core within a more diverse array of less abundant ephemeral populations. The depth-stratified population structure within many phylogenetically disparate clades suggested that ecotypic variation was the rule among most planktonic bacterial and archaeal lineages.Our results suggested that the abundant, persistent core populations comprised the bulk of the biomass within any given clade. As such, we postulate that these corepopulations are largely responsible for microbially driven ecosystem processes, and so represent ideal targets for elucidating key microbial processes in the open-ocean water column.
Date issued
2019-10-01Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental EngineeringJournal
Frontiers in microbiology
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Citation
Mende, Daniel R., Dominique Boeuf and Edward F. DeLong. "Persistent Core Populations Shape the Microbiome Throughout the Water Column in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre." Frontiers in microbiology 10 (2019): article 2273 © 2019 The Author(s)
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1664-302X
Keywords
Microbiology (medical), Microbiology