Abstract

From the aboveground vegetation to the belowground microbes, terrestrial communities differ between the highly divergent alpine (above treeline) and subalpine (below treeline) ecosystems. Yet, much less is known about the partitioning of microbial communities between alpine and subalpine lakes. Our goal was to determine whether the composition of bacterioplankton communities of high-elevation mountain lakes differed across treeline, identify key players in driving the community composition, and identify potential environmental factors that may be driving differences. To do so, we compared bacterial community composition (using 16S rDNA sequencing) of alpine and subalpine lakes in the Southern Rocky Mountain ecoregion at two time points: once in the early summer and once in the late summer. In the early summer (July), shortly after peak runoff, bacterial communities of alpine lakes were distinct from subalpine lakes. Interestingly, by the end of the summer (approximately 5 weeks after the first visit in August), bacterial communities of alpine and subalpine lakes were no longer distinct. Several bacterial amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) were also identified as key players by significantly contributing to the community dissimilarity. The community divergence across treeline found in the early summer was correlated with several environmental factors, including dissolved organic carbon (DOC), pH, chlorophyll-a (chl-a), and total dissolved nitrogen (TDN). In this paper, we offer several potential scenarios driven by both biotic and abiotic factors that could lead to the observed patterns. While the mechanisms for these patterns are yet to be determined, the community dissimilarity in the early summer correlates with the timing of increased hydrologic connections with the terrestrial environment. Springtime snowmelt brings the flushing of mountain watersheds that connects terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. This connectivity declines precipitously throughout the summer after snowmelt is complete. Regional climate change is predicted to bring alterations to precipitation and snowpack, which can modify the flushing of solutes, nutrients, and terrestrial microbes into lakes. Future preservation of the unique alpine lake ecosystem is dependent on a better understanding of ecosystem partitioning across treeline and careful consideration of terrestrial-aquatic connections in mountain watersheds.

Highlights

  • Mountain treelines mark the upper elevational limit of forest growth and an abrupt shift in ecosystem characteristics between forest vegetation and treeless tundra (Körner and Paulsen, 2004; Mayor et al, 2017)

  • Bacterial communities of alpine lakes differed from subalpine lakes in the early summer when blocked by watershed (p = 0.003, R2 = 0.114, Figure 4A), and differences were not due to differences in dispersion (p = 0.774)

  • Comparisons between alpine and subalpine lake communities were blocked by watershed because the bacterial communities of at least one watershed differed from the others on both of the visits

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Summary

Introduction

Mountain treelines mark the upper elevational limit of forest growth and an abrupt shift in ecosystem characteristics between forest vegetation and treeless tundra (Körner and Paulsen, 2004; Mayor et al, 2017). Bacteria and other microbes inhabiting the snow, soil, and surfaces of plants and rocks are swept into lakes from the terrestrial environment (Mašín et al, 2003; Lindström et al, 2006; Crump et al, 2007; Ruiz-González et al, 2015, 2017; Hayden and Beman, 2016). Given this hydrologic connectivity with the surrounding divergent terrestrial environment across treeline, we hypothesized that bacterial communities of alpine and subalpine lakes would be divergent

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