Abstract

Heterotrophic microbial communities cycle nearly half of net primary productivity in the ocean, and play a particularly important role in transformations of dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The specific means by which these communities mediate the transformations of organic carbon are largely unknown, since the vast majority of marine bacteria have not been isolated in culture, and most measurements of DOC degradation rates have focused on uptake and metabolism of either bulk DOC or of simple model compounds (e.g. specific amino acids or sugars). Genomic investigations provide information about the potential capabilities of organisms and communities but not the extent to which such potential is expressed. We tested directly the capabilities of heterotrophic microbial communities in surface ocean waters at 32 stations spanning latitudes from 76°S to 79°N to hydrolyze a range of high molecular weight organic substrates and thereby initiate organic matter degradation. These data demonstrate the existence of a latitudinal gradient in the range of complex substrates available to heterotrophic microbial communities, paralleling the global gradient in bacterial species richness. As changing climate increasingly affects the marine environment, changes in the spectrum of substrates accessible by microbial communities may lead to shifts in the location and rate at which marine DOC is respired. Since the inventory of DOC in the ocean is comparable in magnitude to the atmospheric CO2 reservoir, such a change could profoundly affect the global carbon cycle.

Highlights

  • Marine dissolved organic carbon (DOC) is one of the largest actively cycling reservoirs of organic carbon on earth, comparable in magnitude to the atmospheric reservoir of CO2 [1]; heterotrophic microbial communities play a key role in driving the DOC cycle [2,3,4]

  • DOC consists of many thousands of different compounds, and is operationally divided into labile, semilabile, and recalcitrant fractions that are defined based on timescales of removal in bioassays or by direct measurement in the ocean [5]

  • The requirement for enzymatic hydrolysis is a promising starting point to search for mechanistic explanations of variations in the abilities of marine bacteria to utilize specific fractions of DOC as a substrate

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Summary

Introduction

Marine DOC (dissolved organic carbon) is one of the largest actively cycling reservoirs of organic carbon on earth, comparable in magnitude to the atmospheric reservoir of CO2 [1]; heterotrophic microbial communities play a key role in driving the DOC cycle [2,3,4]. The activities and structural specificities of polysaccharide-hydrolyzing enzymes are of particular importance in this respect, since carbohydrates constitute a large proportion of marine high molecular weight DOC: 54% of surface water DOC and 25% of DOC in the deep ocean [8].

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