Summary: | IX Simposio de Estudios Polares del Comité Español del Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR), 5-7 September 2018, Madrid, España.-- 1 page Marine viruses are the most abundant biological entities in marine ecosystems, and due to their life cycle’ they have an impact on biogeochemical cycles, contributing in making life possible in the oceans. These days, there is a large and well-established knowledge on what regards to viruses’ role in the marine ecosystems. They influence the particle size distribution, particle sinking rates, bacterial and algal biodiversity, and the release of organic compounds derived from biological metabolism. However, little is known about the influence that the interaction between environmental and biological factors may have on marine viruses’ communities. In Antarctic and the sub-Antarctic waters, phytoplankton blooms occur during the Austral summer, and is then when viruses and bacteria can reach their greatest abundance and activity rates. These algal blooms are usually dominated by different taxonomic groups: diatoms, dinoflagellates, haptophytes, cryptomones, etc. Besides, phytoplankton communities are accompanied by bacterial communities, and they are influenced by environmental conditions. Then, all these interactions may have a role in the function and structure of marine viruses. To test which are the main drivers contributing to shape viral community distribution and structure, four environmentally contrasting locations were sampled during the Austral summer-2015. Three locations were near Orkney and Anvers Islands close to the Antarctic Peninsula, and one in the South Georgia Islands in the sub-Antarctic Ocean. These locations presented different physicochemical and biological conditions (e.g. temperature, salinity, viral and bacterial abundance, phytoplankton taxa.). We characterized the physicochemical conditions and the phytoplankton community of these locations, and we studied the marine viral community structure by using the fingerprint technique: Randomly ...
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