Abstract

The Jiaozhou Bay as a model marine ecosystem in China has been intensively investigated over the last 90 years. However, detailed phytoplankton community composition, spatial-temporal dynamics, and its assembly mechanism were still unclear. To address these, we systematically examined the composition and spatial-temporal dynamics of phytoplankton in the Jiaozhou Bay through high-throughput sequencing of 18S rDNA V4. Analysis of 468 samples from 12 sampling sites over one full year revealed much higher phytoplankton diversity than previous reports, and strong seasonal succession patterns. Some phytoplankton also showed spatial variations, although the phytoplankton community didn't show significant distance-decay pattern. Environmental factors (especially temperature), species-species interrelationships and unique resting stages were uncovered to be the main contributors instead of stochastic process in shaping the phytoplankton community assembly. The overwhelming positive correlations between phytoplankton and other protists suggested that coevolution might be critical in this marine ecosystem. Complementary distributions of different amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) of same genera, such as Skeletonema marinoi (ASV_2) and Skeletonema tropicum (ASV_263) of the genus Skeletonema, suggested that phytoplankton have evolved differentially to exploit a wide range of ecological niches. This study laid a solid foundation for asertaining phytoplankton composition and spatial-temporal dynamics in temperate seawaters and mechanisms underlying phytoplankton community assembly, allowing in-depth studies of marine ecology.

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