Abstract

Anthropogenic carbon emissions are causing changes in seawater carbonate chemistry including a decline in the pH of the oceans. While its aftermath for calcifying microbes has been widely studied, the effect of ocean acidification (OA) on marine viruses and their microbial hosts is controversial, and even more in combination with another anthropogenic stressor, i.e., human-induced nutrient loads. In this study, two mesocosm acidification experiments with Mediterranean waters from different seasons revealed distinct effects of OA on viruses and viral-mediated prokaryotic mortality depending on the trophic state and the successional stage of the plankton community. In the winter bloom situation, low fluorescence viruses, the most abundant virus-like particle (VLP) subpopulation comprising mostly bacteriophages, were negatively affected by lowered pH with nutrient addition, while the bacterial host abundance was stimulated. High fluorescence viruses, containing cyanophages, were stimulated by OA regardless of the nutrient conditions, while cyanobacteria of the genus Synechococcus were negatively affected by OA. Moreover, the abundance of very high fluorescence viruses infecting small haptophytes tended to be lower under acidification while their putative hosts' abundance was enhanced, suggesting a direct and negative effect of OA on viral–host interactions. In the oligotrophic summer situation, we found a stimulating effect of OA on total viral abundance and the viral populations, suggesting a cascading effect of the elevated pCO2 stimulating autotrophic and heterotrophic production. In winter, viral lysis accounted for 30 ± 16% of the loss of bacterial standing stock per day (VMMBSS) under increased pCO2 compared to 53 ± 35% in the control treatments, without effects of nutrient additions while in summer, OA had no significant effects on VMMBSS (35 ± 20% and 38 ± 5% per day in the OA and control treatments, respectively). We found that phage production and resulting organic carbon release rates significantly reduced under OA in the nutrient replete winter situation, but it was also observed that high nutrient loads lowered the negative effect of OA on viral lysis, suggesting an antagonistic interplay between these two major global ocean stressors in the Anthropocene. In summer, however, viral-mediated carbon release rates were lower and not affected by lowered pH. Eutrophication consistently stimulated viral production regardless of the season or initial conditions. Given the relevant role of viruses for marine carbon cycling and the biological carbon pump, these two anthropogenic stressors may modulate carbon fluxes through their effect on viruses at the base of the pelagic food web in a future global change scenario.

Highlights

  • Current anthropogenic carbon release rates are unprecedented over the last 66 million years (Zeebe et al, 2016)

  • Initial experimental nitrogen concentrations in the N treatments were higher in the WINTER than in the SUMMER experiment, as they were added by multiplying the monthly average concentration measured in the Blanes Bay Microbial Observatory (BBMO) during the last 10 years by a factor of 8 (Table 1)

  • While in the nutrient-replete situation of the WINTER experiment, the abundance of viral populations and bacteriophage production tended to be negatively affected by OA; in the SUMMER experiment, we found a stimulating trend of lowered pH on viral abundance and production

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Summary

Introduction

Current anthropogenic carbon release rates are unprecedented over the last 66 million years (Zeebe et al, 2016). Since preindustrial time until the present, the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere has increased from ∼277 ppm (e.g., Joos and Spahni, 2008) to 410 ppm in 2019 (Dlugokencky and Tans, 2020) due to the burning of fossil fuels, cement manufacturing, and land use changes. The ocean has absorbed about 30% of these CO2 emissions since 1750, leading to changes in seawater carbonate chemistry and a decline in pH (Sabine et al, 2004). Preindustrial pH values in the surface ocean of about 8.2 are expected to decrease to 7.8 at the end of the twenty-first century in a high-CO2-emission, “business-as-usual” scenario (Bopp et al, 2013), a process referred to as ocean acidification (OA, Caldeira and Wickett, 2003). Synergistic (Cai et al, 2011) or antagonistic interplays between both processes have been suggested (Borges and Gypens, 2010; Malone and Newton, 2020)

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