Abstract

Atmospheric deposition is a source of inorganic nutrients and organic matter to the ocean, and can favor the growth of some planktonic species over others according to their nutrient requirements. Atmospheric inputs from natural and anthropogenic sources are nowadays increasing due to desertification and industrialization, respectively. While the impact of mineral dust (mainly from the Saharan desert) on phytoplankton and bacterial community composition has been previously assessed, the effect of anthropogenic aerosols on marine bacterial assemblages remains poorly studied. Since marine bacteria play a range of roles in the biogeochemical cycles of inorganic nutrients and organic carbon, it is important to determine which taxa of marine bacteria may benefit from aerosol fertilization and which not. Here, we experimentally assessed the effect of Saharan dust and anthropogenic aerosols on marine bacterioplankton community composition across a spatial and temporal range of trophic conditions in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea. Results from 16S rDNA sequencing showed that bacterial diversity varied significantly with seasonality and geographical location. While atmospheric deposition did not yield significant changes in community composition when all the experiments where considered together, it did produce changes at certain places and during certain times of the year. These effects accounted for shifts in the bacterial community’s relative abundance of up to 28%. The effect of aerosols was overall greatest in summer, both types of atmospheric particles stimulating the groups Alphaproteobacteria, Betaproteobacteria, and Cyanobacteria in the location with the highest anthropogenic footprint. Other bacterial groups benefited from one or the other aerosol depending on the season and location. Anthropogenic aerosols increased the relative abundance of groups belonging to the phylum Bacteriodetes (Cytophagia, Flavobacteriia, and Sphingobacteriia), while Saharan dust stimulated most the phytoplanktonic group of Cyanobacteria and, more specifically, Synechococcus.

Highlights

  • Marine bacterioplankton play fundamental roles in the cycling of carbon

  • The main objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of different types of atmospheric particles on bacterial community composition in surface waters of the NW Mediterranean

  • In order to test for effects of atmospheric particles on bacterioplankton composition, we took into account the variability in both space and time

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Summary

Introduction

Marine bacterioplankton play fundamental roles in the cycling of carbon. Photosynthetic bacteria (i.e., Cyanobacteria) take up CO2 and transform it into organic matter. In the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea, as in the global ocean, large amounts of OC have been recorded in its surface waters during the summer stratification period (May–October). This phenomenon has been attributed to a “malfunctioning” of the microbial loop, brought forth by nutrient limitation or competition between prokaryotes and phytoplankton (Thingstad et al, 1997; Pinhassi et al, 2006). In the NW Mediterranean, OC may limit heterotrophic planktonic growth and production during periods of winter mixing (December–March), both in open ocean (Thingstad et al, 1997) and coastal waters (Pinhassi et al, 2006)

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