Prokaryotic community structure and heterotrophic production in a river-influenced coastal arctic ecosystem

14 pages, 3 figures, 5 tables Spatial patterns in prokaryotic biodiversity and production were assessed in the Mackenzie shelf region of the Beaufort Sea during open-water conditions. The sampling transect extended 350 km northwards, from upstream freshwater sites in the Mackenzie River to coastal a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Aquatic Microbial Ecology
Main Authors: Garneau, Marie-Ève, Vicent, Warwick F., Alonso-Sáez, Laura, Gratton, Yves, Lovejoy, Connie
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Inter Research 2006
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/27392
https://doi.org/10.3354/ame042027
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Summary:14 pages, 3 figures, 5 tables Spatial patterns in prokaryotic biodiversity and production were assessed in the Mackenzie shelf region of the Beaufort Sea during open-water conditions. The sampling transect extended 350 km northwards, from upstream freshwater sites in the Mackenzie River to coastal and offshore sites, towards the edge of the perennial arctic ice pack. The analyses revealed strong gradients in community structure and prokaryotic cell concentrations, both of which correlated with salinity. Picocyanobacterial abundance was low (102 to 103 cells ml–1), particularly at the offshore stations that were least influenced by the river plume. Analysis by catalyzed reporter deposition for fluorescence in situ hybridization (CARD-FISH) showed that the dominant heterotrophic cell types were β-Proteobacteria at river sites, shifting to dominance by α-Proteobacteria offshore. Cells in the Cytophaga–Flavobacter–Bacteroides and γ-Proteobacteria groups each contributed <5% of total counts in the river, but >10% of counts in the marine samples. Archaea were detected among the surface-water microbiota, contributing on average 1.3% of the total DAPI counts in marine samples, but 6.0% in turbid coastal and riverine waters. 3H-leucine uptake rates were significantly higher at 2 stations influenced by the river (1.5 pmol l–1 h–1) than at other marine stations or in the river itself (≤0.5 pmol–1 h–1). Size-fractionation experiments at 2 coastal sites showed that >65% of heterotrophic production was associated with particles >3 µm. These results indicate the importance of particle-attached prokaryotes, and imply a broad functional diversity of heterotrophic microbes that likely facilitates breakdown of the heterogeneous dissolved and particulate terrestrial materials discharged into arctic seas This study was made possible with financial support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Canada Research Chair program, Fonds québécois de recherche sur la nature et les ...