Abstract

Marine oil spills can impact both coastal and offshore marine environments, but little information is available on how the microbial response to oil and dispersants might differ between these biomes. Here, we describe the compositional and functional response of microbial communities to different concentrations of oil and chemically dispersed oil in coastal and offshore surface waters from the Texas-Louisiana continental shelf. Using a combination of analytical chemistry and 16S rRNA amplicon and metatranscriptomic sequencing, we provide a broad, comparative overview of the ecological response of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria and their expression of hydrocarbon-degrading genes in marine surface waters over time between two oceanic biomes. We found evidence for the existence of different ecotypes of several commonly described hydrocarbon-degrading bacterial taxa which behaved differentially in coastal and offshore shelf waters despite being exposed to similar concentrations of oil, dispersants, and nutrients. This resulted in the differential expression of catabolic pathways for n-alkanes and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)-the two major categories of compounds found in crude oil-with preferential expression of n-alkane degradation genes in coastal waters while offshore microbial communities trended more toward the expression of PAH degradation genes. This was unexpected as it contrasts with the generally held view that n-alkanes, being more labile, are attacked before the more refractory PAHs. Collectively, our results provide new insights into the existence and potential consequences of niche partitioning of hydrocarbon-degrading taxa between neighboring marine environments.IMPORTANCE In the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the taxonomic response of marine microbial communities to oil and dispersants has been extensively studied. However, relatively few studies on the functional response of these microbial communities have been reported, especially in a longitudinal fashion. Moreover, despite the fact that marine oil spills typically impact thousands of square kilometers of both coastal and offshore marine environments, little information is available on how the microbial response to oil and dispersants might differ between these biomes. The results of this study help fill this critical knowledge gap and provide valuable insight into how oil spill response efforts, such as chemically dispersing oil, may have differing effects in neighboring coastal and offshore marine environments.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE In the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the taxonomic response of marine microbial communities to oil and dispersants has been extensively studied

  • Our results revealed that these ecotype differences between the coastal and offshore communities resulted in differential expression of alkane and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) catabolic pathways between these oceanic biomes and that the response to dispersants was variable by location

  • Four treatments were prepared in triplicate for each experiment: (i) Control, containing only seawater; (ii) Water Accommodated Fraction (WAF), containing seawater amended with the fraction of oil accommodated after physical mixing alone; (iii) Chemically Enhanced WAF (CEWAF), seawater amended with the fraction of oil accommodated after dispersal with Corexit; and (iv) Diluted CEWAF (DCEWAF), a 1:10 dilution of the CEWAF treatment

Read more

Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE In the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the taxonomic response of marine microbial communities to oil and dispersants has been extensively studied. Despite the fact that marine oil spills typically impact thousands of square kilometers of both coastal and offshore marine environments, little information is available on how the microbial response to oil and dispersants might differ between these biomes. Oil spills can affect many thousands of square kilometers of both open ocean and coastal habitats, and the microbial communities which inhabit these respective marine biomes can differ substantially in composition, structure, and metabolic potential [23, 24]. The responses of the microbial communities were subsequently followed over time using cell counts and 16S rRNA amplicon and metatranscriptomic sequencing This analysis allowed us to identify which groups of bacteria responded to oil with and without dispersant and characterize the functional response of hydrocarbon-degrading microbes within the communities. Our results revealed that these ecotype differences between the coastal and offshore communities resulted in differential expression of alkane and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) catabolic pathways between these oceanic biomes and that the response to dispersants was variable by location

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call