CrumpByronCEOASMetacommunityDynamicsBacteria_SupplementaryMaterial.pdf

To understand mechanisms linking ecosystem processes and microbial diversity in freshwater ecosystems, bacterial productivity and the metacommunity dynamics of species sorting and mass effects were investigated in an 18 ha headwater lake in northern Alaska. On most sampling dates, the phylogenetic c...

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Main Authors: Adams, Heather E., Crump, Byron C., Kling, George W.
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/tx31qk50g
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:tx31qk50g 2023-06-18T03:39:35+02:00 CrumpByronCEOASMetacommunityDynamicsBacteria_SupplementaryMaterial.pdf Adams, Heather E. Crump, Byron C. Kling, George W. https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/tx31qk50g unknown https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/tx31qk50g In Copyright species sorting transplant experiments metacommunity theory aquatic microbiology arctic mass effects bacterial production ftoregonstate 2023-06-04T16:51:01Z To understand mechanisms linking ecosystem processes and microbial diversity in freshwater ecosystems, bacterial productivity and the metacommunity dynamics of species sorting and mass effects were investigated in an 18 ha headwater lake in northern Alaska. On most sampling dates, the phylogenetic composition of bacterial communities in inflowing streams (inlets) was strikingly different than that in the lake and the outflowing stream (outlet) (16S DGGE fingerprinting), demonstrating the shift in composition that occurs as these communities transit the lake. Outlet and downstream communities were also more productive than inlet and upstream communities (¹⁴C-leucine incorporation). Inlet bacteria transplanted to the outlet stream in dialysis bags were equally or less productive than control bacteria, suggesting that the inlet bacteria are capable of growing under lake conditions, but do not remain abundant because of species sorting in the lake. Outlet bacteria (representative of epilimnetic bacteria) transplanted to the inlet stream were less productive than control bacteria, suggesting that lake bacteria are not as well adapted to growing under inlet conditions. Based on water density, inlet stream water and bacteria generally entered the lake at the base of the epilimnion. However, during low to medium flow in the inlet stream the residence time of the epilimnion was too long relative to bacterial doubling times for these allochthonous bacteria to have a mass effect on the composition of outlet bacteria. The highest community similarity between inlet and outlet bacteria was detected after a large rain event in 2003, with over 61% similarity (average non-storm similarities were 39 ± 8%). While mass effects may be important during large storm events, species sorting appears to be the predominant mechanism structuring bacterial communities within the lake, leading to the assembly of a lake community that has lost some ability to function in stream habitats. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Alaska ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language unknown
topic species sorting
transplant experiments
metacommunity theory
aquatic microbiology
arctic
mass effects
bacterial production
spellingShingle species sorting
transplant experiments
metacommunity theory
aquatic microbiology
arctic
mass effects
bacterial production
Adams, Heather E.
Crump, Byron C.
Kling, George W.
CrumpByronCEOASMetacommunityDynamicsBacteria_SupplementaryMaterial.pdf
topic_facet species sorting
transplant experiments
metacommunity theory
aquatic microbiology
arctic
mass effects
bacterial production
description To understand mechanisms linking ecosystem processes and microbial diversity in freshwater ecosystems, bacterial productivity and the metacommunity dynamics of species sorting and mass effects were investigated in an 18 ha headwater lake in northern Alaska. On most sampling dates, the phylogenetic composition of bacterial communities in inflowing streams (inlets) was strikingly different than that in the lake and the outflowing stream (outlet) (16S DGGE fingerprinting), demonstrating the shift in composition that occurs as these communities transit the lake. Outlet and downstream communities were also more productive than inlet and upstream communities (¹⁴C-leucine incorporation). Inlet bacteria transplanted to the outlet stream in dialysis bags were equally or less productive than control bacteria, suggesting that the inlet bacteria are capable of growing under lake conditions, but do not remain abundant because of species sorting in the lake. Outlet bacteria (representative of epilimnetic bacteria) transplanted to the inlet stream were less productive than control bacteria, suggesting that lake bacteria are not as well adapted to growing under inlet conditions. Based on water density, inlet stream water and bacteria generally entered the lake at the base of the epilimnion. However, during low to medium flow in the inlet stream the residence time of the epilimnion was too long relative to bacterial doubling times for these allochthonous bacteria to have a mass effect on the composition of outlet bacteria. The highest community similarity between inlet and outlet bacteria was detected after a large rain event in 2003, with over 61% similarity (average non-storm similarities were 39 ± 8%). While mass effects may be important during large storm events, species sorting appears to be the predominant mechanism structuring bacterial communities within the lake, leading to the assembly of a lake community that has lost some ability to function in stream habitats.
author Adams, Heather E.
Crump, Byron C.
Kling, George W.
author_facet Adams, Heather E.
Crump, Byron C.
Kling, George W.
author_sort Adams, Heather E.
title CrumpByronCEOASMetacommunityDynamicsBacteria_SupplementaryMaterial.pdf
title_short CrumpByronCEOASMetacommunityDynamicsBacteria_SupplementaryMaterial.pdf
title_full CrumpByronCEOASMetacommunityDynamicsBacteria_SupplementaryMaterial.pdf
title_fullStr CrumpByronCEOASMetacommunityDynamicsBacteria_SupplementaryMaterial.pdf
title_full_unstemmed CrumpByronCEOASMetacommunityDynamicsBacteria_SupplementaryMaterial.pdf
title_sort crumpbyronceoasmetacommunitydynamicsbacteria_supplementarymaterial.pdf
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/tx31qk50g
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Alaska
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/tx31qk50g
op_rights In Copyright
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