Spatial biodiversity patterns of bacterio- and picoplankton communities in Arctic fjords

Marine microbial plankton drive global biogeochemical cycles and are therefore pivotal to the ecosystem functioning of the biosphere. In particular marine picoplankton harbour a vast biodiversity on which their community dynamics and functioning are based. Because they function collectively as a com...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thomé, Pauline
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/53676/
https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/53676/1/Bachelorarbeit_Pauline_Thome_21550954.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.9d50f18c-f636-4c5f-ab33-8846853c6064
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Summary:Marine microbial plankton drive global biogeochemical cycles and are therefore pivotal to the ecosystem functioning of the biosphere. In particular marine picoplankton harbour a vast biodiversity on which their community dynamics and functioning are based. Because they function collectively as a community, it is crucial to understand the underlying diversity patterns of microbial assemblages and identify their drivers. The data set I investigated here allows insights into surface water bacterio- and picoplankton communities of Arctic and subarctic coastal waters and fjord systems. To infer their diversity with a metabarcoding approach, I amplified and sequenced the V4 regions of the prokaryotic 16S and eukaryotic 18S ribosomal DNA which serve as molecular markers. The resulting amplicons were arranged into amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) which I used as a substitute for species. In comparing prokaryotic and picoeukaryotic alpha and beta diversity across space, I unveiled profound differences between the domains, the investigated regions and the respective drivers. Picoeukaryotes appeared to vastly exceed prokaryotes in their richness and are thus hypothesized to comprise a large rare biosphere ensuring community stability. They are more strongly influenced by fjord structures and glaciers than prokaryotes and I found spring bloom conditions to induce a drastic decrease in picoeukaryotic richness. Prokaryotes appeared to be more strongly influenced by nutrient availability and environmental conditions than picoeukaryotes, resulting in a higher spatial turnover through more efficient taxa sorting. I found no distance-decay relationship in prokaryotic and picoeukaryotic communities on the scales observed here. I assume a functional coupling and mutual dependence of the prokaryotic and eukaryotic communities based on co-varying alpha diversity measures, which were fundamentally restructured by spring bloom conditions. I observed a pronounced compositional turnover in both space and time. Seasonal succession and ...