Abstract

Organic matter produced and released by phytoplankton during growth is processed by heterotrophic bacterial communities that transform dissolved organic matter into biomass and recycle inorganic nutrients, fueling microbial food web interactions. Bacterial transformation of phytoplankton-derived organic matter also plays a poorly known role in the formation of chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) which is ubiquitous in the ocean. Despite the importance of organic matter cycling, growth of phytoplankton and activities of heterotrophic bacterial communities are rarely measured in concert. To investigate CDOM formation mediated by microbial processing of phytoplankton-derived aggregates, we conducted growth experiments with non-axenic monocultures of three diatoms (Skeletonema grethae, Leptocylindrus hargravesii, Coscinodiscus sp.) and one haptophyte (Phaeocystis globosa). Phytoplankton biomass, carbon concentrations, CDOM and base-extracted particulate organic matter (BEPOM) fluorescence, along with bacterial abundance and hydrolytic enzyme activities (α-glucosidase, β-glucosidase, leucine-aminopeptidase) were measured during exponential growth and stationary phase (~3-6 weeks) and following six weeks of POM degradation. Incubations were performed in rotating glass bottles to keep cells suspended, promoting cell coagulation and, thus, formation of macroscopic aggregates (marine snow), more similar to surface ocean processes. Maximum carbon concentrations, enzyme activities, and BEPOM fluorescence occurred during stationary phase. Net DOC concentrations (0.19-0.46 mg C L-1) increased on the same order as open ocean concentrations. CDOM fluorescence was dominated by protein-like signals that increased throughout growth and degradation becoming increasingly humic-like, implying the production of more complex molecules from planktonic-precursors mediated by microbial processing. Our experimental results suggest that at least a portion of open-ocean CDOM is produced by autochthonous processes and aggregation likely facilitates microbial reprocessing of organic matter into refractory DOM.

Highlights

  • Oceanic primary production (PP) contributes between 35 and 65 petagrams (Pg) of carbon annually to global net PP (Field et al, 1998; del Giorgio and Duarte, 2002; Carr et al, 2006; Chavez et al, 2011), mainly through autochthonous production by photosynthetic phytoplankton

  • Given the potential importance of heterotrophic bacterial processing of organic matter for both biogeochemical cycling and contribution to deep-sea fluorescence, we aimed to investigate the role of microbes in the formation of openocean chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) from phytoplankton-derived POM to better understand sources of open-ocean fluorescence

  • We demonstrate that the production of CDOM fluorescence is directly related to microbial processing of phytoplankton-derived material

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Summary

Introduction

Oceanic primary production (PP) contributes between 35 and 65 petagrams (Pg) of carbon annually to global net PP (Field et al, 1998; del Giorgio and Duarte, 2002; Carr et al, 2006; Chavez et al, 2011), mainly through autochthonous production by photosynthetic phytoplankton. Sinking aggregates (or marine snow) are an amalgam of intact phytoplankton cells, detritus, fecal pellets, silica and/or carbonate frustules (that provide ballast) and transparent exopolymeric material (TEP) (Alldredge and Silver, 1988). These aggregates exhibit a wide variability with respect to chemical composition (Wakeham and Lee, 1989, 1993; Minor et al, 2003) and may result in significant export of organic matter to depth (e.g., Hansell et al, 2009; Carlson et al, 2010) and contribution to refractory DOM (RDOM) formation (Lechtenfeld et al, 2015)

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