Abstract

Molecular surveys are revealing diverse eukaryotic assemblages in oxygen-limited ocean waters. These communities may play pivotal ecological roles through autotrophy, feeding, and a wide range of symbiotic associations with prokaryotes. We used 18S rRNA gene sequencing to provide the first snapshot of pelagic microeukaryotic community structure in two cellular size fractions (0.2–1.6 μm, >1.6 μm) from seven depths through the anoxic oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) off northern Chile. Sequencing of >154,000 amplicons revealed contrasting patterns of phylogenetic diversity across size fractions and depths. Protist and total eukaryote diversity in the >1.6 μm fraction peaked at the chlorophyll maximum in the upper photic zone before declining by ~50% in the OMZ. In contrast, diversity in the 0.2–1.6 μm fraction, though also elevated in the upper photic zone, increased four-fold from the lower oxycline to a maximum at the anoxic OMZ core. Dinoflagellates of the Dinophyceae and endosymbiotic Syndiniales clades dominated the protist assemblage at all depths (~40–70% of sequences). Other protist groups varied with depth, with the anoxic zone community of the larger size fraction enriched in euglenozoan flagellates and acantharean radiolarians (up to 18 and 40% of all sequences, respectively). The OMZ 0.2–1.6 μm fraction was dominated (11–99%) by Syndiniales, which exhibited depth-specific variation in composition and total richness despite uniform oxygen conditions. Metazoan sequences, though confined primarily to the 1.6 μm fraction above the OMZ, were also detected within the anoxic zone where groups such as copepods increased in abundance relative to the oxycline and upper OMZ. These data, compared to those from other low-oxygen sites, reveal variation in OMZ microeukaryote composition, helping to identify clades with potential adaptations to oxygen-depletion.

Highlights

  • Marine oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) support complex microbial communities adapted for life under low oxygen conditions

  • SAMPLE COLLECTION AND DNA EXTRACTION Microbial community samples were collected from the Eastern Tropical South Pacific (ETSP) OMZ as part of the Center for Microbial Ecology: Research and DATA ANALYSIS Amplicons were analyzed according to established protocols using the QIIME package (Caporaso et al, 2010)

  • In the >1.6 μm fraction, phylogenetic diversity (PD), which measures the total branch length connecting all Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) in the 18S rRNA gene phylogeny, peaked at 32 m within the primary chlorophyll maximum, but was comparable between surface (5 m) and anoxic (110–320 m) depths (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Marine oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) support complex microbial communities adapted for life under low oxygen conditions. Oxygen depletion at the ETSP OMZ core (∼100–400 m) selects for communities dominated by bacteria and archaea (prokaryotes) capable of anaerobic or microaerophilic metabolism (Stevens and Ulloa, 2008; Ulloa et al, 2012). These microorganisms make important contributions to marine nitrogen, sulfur, and carbon cycling (Wright et al, 2012), for example as mediators of nitrogen loss through denitrification and anaerobic ammonium oxidation (Thamdrup et al, 2006; Lam et al, 2009). While bacteria and archaea in the ETSP OMZ are becoming better understood, and numerous studies have examined benthic meiofaunal diversity beneath OMZs (Neira et al, 2001; Levin, 2003), little is known about pelagic eukaryote diversity in this unique oxygen-depleted environment

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