Summary: | Programa de Doctorado: Oceanografía The distribution of Crenarchaeota, Euryarchaeota and some major groups of Bacteria (SAR 11, Roseobacter, Gamma-proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes) was investigated in the North Atlantic water column (surface-2000 m) along a transect from the coastal waters of the NW Africa upwelling to the offshore waters of the Canary Coastal Transition Zone(CTZ). Catalyzed reported deposition fluorescence in situ hybridization (CARD-FISH) was used to describe the composition of the prokaryotic assemblages. Additionally bulk picoplankton abundance and leucine incorporation was determined Pronounced changes in the composition of the prokaryotic assemblages were observed from the coastal region to the open ocean and at the Deep Chlorophyll Maximum (DCM) accompanied with decreasing bulk heterotrophic activity. All bacterial groups decreased in absolute abundances from the coast to the open ocean, whereas both archaeal groups increased towards the open ocean. SAR 11, was the most abundant prokaryotic group in the DCM and probably responsible of major changes in bulk heterotrophic production. Prokaryotic abundance and activity decreased two and three orders of magnitude, respectively, fromthe surface to 2000 m depth. Prokaryotic growth rates were, however, high in the mesopelagic zone (about 0.13 d-1), compared to other reports from the central North Atlantic. Throughout the water column, the contribution of SAR11 to total picoplanktonabundance decreased from 42% in the DCM to 4% at 2000 m depth, while Crenarchaeota increased from 1% in the DCM to 39% in the Oxygen Minimum (OM) layer. A clear influence of the different intermediate water masses was observed on the bulk picoplankton heterotrophic activity with lower leucine incorporation rates corresponding to layers where patches of Antarctic Intermediate Water were detected. Our results show that coastal-ocean and surface-depth gradients in bulk prokaryotic abundance and production,as well as in assemblage composition, were comparable to changes observed in basin-scale studies, pointing the coastal transition zones as regions of strong variability in microbial diversity and metabolism. Programa de Oceanografía 2005-2007
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