Abstract

Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus are pico-sized cyanobacteria that play a fundamental role in oceanic primary production, being particularly important in warm, nutrient-poor waters. Their potential response to nutrient enrichment is expected to be contrasting and to differ from larger phytoplankton species. Here, we used a metagenomic approach to characterize the responses to nutrient enrichment in the community of picocyanobacteria and to analyze the cyanophage response during a mesocosms experiment in the oligotrophic Red Sea. Natural picoplankton community was dominated by Synechococcus clade II, with marginal presence of Prochlorococcus (0.3% bacterial reads). Increased nutrient input triggered a fast Synechococcus bloom, with clade II being the dominant, with no response of Prochlorococcus growth. The largest bloom developed in the mesocosms receiving a single initial input of nutrients, instead of daily additions. The relative abundances of cyanophage sequences in cellular metagenomes increased during the experiment from 12.6% of total virus reads up to 40% in the treatment with the largest Synechococcus bloom. The subsequent collapse of the bloom pointed to a cyanophage infection on Synechococcus that reduced its competitive capacity, and was then followed by a diatom bloom. The cyanophage attack appears to have preferentially affected the most abundant Synechococcus clade II, increasing the evenness within the host population. Our results highlight the relevance of host-phage interactions on determining population dynamics and diversity of Synechococcus populations.

Highlights

  • The cyanobacteria Synechococcus and Prochlorococcus are major components of marine picophytoplankton (

  • There is a distinct distribution of Synechococcus clades globally, where clades I and IV usually dominate in cold, nutrient-rich waters; clades II, III, and X proliferate in warm and oligotrophic habitats; clades CRD1 and CRD2 are more successful in Fe-depleted waters, and the less abundant clades XV and XVI are mostly present at ecotone sites with intermediate conditions (Sohm et al, 2016)

  • Our data showed that Synechococcus populations dominated the phytoplankton response during the first days after nutrient addition

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Summary

Introduction

The cyanobacteria Synechococcus and Prochlorococcus are major components of marine picophytoplankton (

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