Abstract

The dynamics of bacterial composition and metabolic activity during a distinct phytoplankton bloom have been reported. However, there is limited information on the bacterial community response to drastic environmental changes caused by species succession during a mixed-species bloom. This study investigated active bacterial groups and metabolic activity during a mixed bloom formed by dinoflagellates Prorocentrum obtusidens and Karenia mikimotoi using a metaproteomic approach. Bacterial community structure and dominant bacterial groups varied rapidly with the bloom regime shifts caused by species succession. Pseudoalteromonas and Vibrio dominated the bacterial community in the P. obtusidens-dominated regime, while Alteromonas, Cytophaga-Flavobacteria-Bacteroides (CFB) group, and marine Roseobacter clade (MRC) were the major contributors in other regimes, with the most abundant taxa being Alteromonas in the K. mikimotoi-dominated regime and the CFB group in the dissipation regime. Specific metabolic niches and unique substrate specificity of different bacterial groups enabled them to dominate and thrive in different bloom regimes. High metabolic plasticity in signal response, substrate utilization, motility, and adhesion are essential for bacteria to respond to drastic bloom regime shift, and the predominance of specific bacteria under unique bloom regimes may be the result of long-term coevolution between bacteria and bloom-forming phytoplankton species.

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