Abstract

Prokaryotes play a fundamental role in decomposing organic matter in the ocean, but little is known about how microbial metabolic capabilities vary at the global ocean scale and what are the drivers causing this variation. We aimed at obtaining the first global exploration of the functional capabilities of prokaryotes in the ocean, with emphasis on the under-sampled meso- and bathypelagic layers. We explored the potential utilization of 95 carbon sources with Biolog GN2 plates® in 441 prokaryotic communities sampled from surface to bathypelagic waters (down to 4,000 m) at 111 stations distributed across the tropical and subtropical Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans. The resulting metabolic profiles were compared with biological and physico-chemical properties such as fluorescent dissolved organic matter (DOM) or temperature. The relative use of the individual substrates was remarkably consistent across oceanic regions and layers, and only the Equatorial Pacific Ocean showed a different metabolic structure. When grouping substrates by categories, we observed some vertical variations, such as an increased relative utilization of polymers in bathypelagic layers or a higher relative use of P-compounds or amino acids in the surface ocean. The increased relative use of polymers with depth, together with the increases in humic DOM, suggest that deep ocean communities have the capability to process complex DOM. Overall, the main identified driver of the metabolic structure of ocean prokaryotic communities was temperature. Our results represent the first global depiction of the potential use of a variety of carbon sources by prokaryotic communities across the tropical and the subtropical ocean and show that acetic acid clearly emerges as one of the most widely potentially used carbon sources in the ocean.

Highlights

  • Marine heterotrophic prokaryotes are responsible for most of the assimilation and the transformation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the ocean

  • Water samples were collected during the Malaspina-2010 Circumnavigation Expedition (Duarte, 2015), and the metabolic profiles of the studied communities were determined by their capability to use a range of sole carbon sources based on Biolog GN2 microplates

  • Each of the 441 studied communities used 72% of the 95 substrates included in the Biolog microplates

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Marine heterotrophic prokaryotes are responsible for most of the assimilation and the transformation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the ocean. Differences in FDOM between the epipelagic and the bathypelagic ocean during the Malaspina Expedition (Catalá et al, 2015, 2016) suggest that the patterns of substrate use may change with depth due to the vertical variations in the quality of DOM. Water samples were collected during the Malaspina-2010 Circumnavigation Expedition (Duarte, 2015), and the metabolic profiles of the studied communities were determined by their capability to use a range of sole carbon sources based on Biolog GN2 microplates. We hypothesize that, based mainly on the patterns of FDOM and prokaryotic community composition during the Malaspina-2010 cruise (Catalá et al, 2016; Salazar et al, 2016; Ruiz-González et al, 2019), the use of different carbon substrates will vary weakly among oceans while showing pronounced changes with depth

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
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