Abstract

Abstract Viral dynamics, community structure, and the impact of viruses on phytoplankton mortality in comparison with microzooplankton grazing were determined in the natural iron-fertilized waters southeast of the Kerguelen Islands, Southern Ocean, during the austral summer (January–February 2005). The study area was characterized by a phytoplankton bloom above the Kerguelen Plateau and the high-nutrient low-chlorophyll waters surrounding it. During the Kerguelen Ocean and Plateau compared Study (KEOPS), viral abundance was relatively high (1–19×107 mL−1) as compared to the few other studies in the Southern Ocean, significantly correlating with depth and system productivity. Viral abundance showed a strong positive relationship with the numerically dominant bacterial hosts, which in turn were correlated to phytoplankton biomass. In total, 13 different viral genome sizes were detected, with the lower-sized genomes 34 and 68 kb dominating at all stations. The viral community at the low chlorophyll C-transect grouped apart from the more productive transects A and B. Potential algal viruses were recorded for all stations, but only at very low intensities. Virally induced lysis of the smaller-sized (

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