DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/ame01661
copiedSpatiotemporal distributions of rare bacterioplankton populations indicate adaptive strategies in the oligotrophic ocean
ABSTRACT:
Spatiotemporal distributions of rare microbial taxa were examined in 384 samples from the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS) site, in the northwestern Sargasso Sea. Sequences were partitioned into 6 mutually exclusive sets based on abundance (abundant, rare, and very rare) and frequency of detection (frequent and infrequent). Analyses of variance for taxa that were frequently present, across all levels of abundance, demonstrated environmental filtering, indicating that gradients in environmental factors, such as season and depth, drive community assembly for rare taxa, as they do for abundant taxa. All abundant nodal taxonomic units (NTUs) had spatiotemporal periods of rarity, providing a clear demonstration of the role of fluctuating reproductive success in population dynamics, and the role of rare populations as seed banks. An inverse relationship between the number of rare taxa and physical stratification indicates that transport by mixing drives increased community diversity throughout most of the year. Populations of selected copiotrophic taxa varied in episodic patterns that were not tightly entrained to season and depth, indicating that these populations are not governed by the same rules of community assembly that apply to most other taxa and may be adapted to exploit infrequent, unknown disturbances. Overall, the findings support the perspective that the success of most rare populations was driven by the same fundamental patterns of spatiotemporal variation that drove the success of dominant populations, but also indicate potentially important roles for transport by mixing and atypical life histories in determination of community composition.
KEYWORDS

CTD array and scanning electron micrograph (inset) of bacterioplankton from a 40 m sample collected on a 0.2 µm filter. Photo: Craig Carlson; inset: Yanlin Zhao and the Oregon State University Electron Microscope Facility.
Many marine bacterioplankton taxa cycle between rarity and abundance over the course of the year. These oscillations affect basic ecosystem functions such as photosynthesis and carbon sequestration. Vergin and co-workers studied these populations at the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS) site, in the northwestern Sargasso Sea, using next generation sequencing technology. The new technology allowed them to track rare populations with the same precision that previously had been used to track more abundant bacterioplankton. Even taxa that were not dominant showed regular seasonal cycles, but some rare taxa behaved differently. Many well-known bacterial taxa, such as the genera Vibrio and Alteromonas, fluctuated randomly suggesting that some bacterioplankton have evolved adaptations to exploit previously unrecognized random disturbances of plankton communities.
Kevin L. Vergin (Co-author)
- Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA
Brad Done (Co-author)
- Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA
C. A. Carlson (Co-author)
- Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA
Stephen J. Giovannoni (Co-author)
- Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA
