The Bay of Bengal exposes abundant photosynthetic picoplankton and newfound diversity along salinity‐driven gradients.

Strauss, Jan , Choi, Chang Jae, Grone, Jonathan, Wittmers, Fabian, Jimenez-Thamm, Valeria, Makareviciute-Fichtner, Kriste , Bachy, Charles , Jaeger, Gualtiero Spiro, Poirier, Camille, Eckmann, Charlotte, Spezzano, Rachele, Löscher, Carolin R., Sarma, V. V. S. S., Mahadevan, Amala and Worden, Alexandra Z. (2023) The Bay of Bengal exposes abundant photosynthetic picoplankton and newfound diversity along salinity‐driven gradients. Open Access Environmental Microbiology, 25 (11). pp. 2118-2141. DOI 10.1111/1462-2920.16431.

[thumbnail of Environmental Microbiology - 2023 - Strauss - The Bay of Bengal exposes abundant photosynthetic picoplankton and newfound.pdf]
Preview
Text
Environmental Microbiology - 2023 - Strauss - The Bay of Bengal exposes abundant photosynthetic picoplankton and newfound.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0.

Download (7MB) | Preview

Supplementary data:

Abstract

The Bay of Bengal (BoB) is a 2,600,000 km2 expanse in the Indian Ocean upon which many humans rely. However, the primary producers underpinning food chains here remain poorly characterized. We examined phytoplankton abundance and diversity along strong BoB latitudinal and vertical salinity gradients—which have low temperature variation (27–29°C) between the surface and subsurface chlorophyll maximum (SCM). In surface waters, Prochlorococcus averaged 11.7 ± 4.4 × 104 cells ml−1, predominantly HLII, whereas LLII and ‘rare’ ecotypes, HLVI and LLVII, dominated in the SCM. Synechococcus averaged 8.4 ± 2.3 × 104 cells ml−1 in the surface, declined rapidly with depth, and population structure of dominant Clade II differed between surface and SCM; Clade X was notable at both depths. Across all sites, Ostreococcus Clade OII dominated SCM eukaryotes whereas communities differentiated strongly moving from Arabian Sea-influenced high salinity (southerly; prasinophytes) to freshwater-influenced low salinity (northerly; stramenopiles, specifically, diatoms, pelagophytes, and dictyochophytes, plus the prasinophyte Micromonas) surface waters. Eukaryotic phytoplankton peaked in the south (1.9 × 104 cells ml−1, surface) where a novel Ostreococcus was revealed, named here Ostreococcus bengalensis. We expose dominance of a single picoeukaryote and hitherto ‘rare’ picocyanobacteria at depth in this complex ecosystem where studies suggest picoplankton are replacing larger phytoplankton due to climate change.

Document Type: Article
Keywords: Bay of Bengal;
Research affiliation: OceanRep > GEOMAR > FB3 Marine Ecology > FB3-OEB Ökosystembiologie des Ozeans
Woods Hole
Main POF Topic: PT6: Marine Life
Refereed: Yes
Open Access Journal?: No
Publisher: Wiley
Related URLs:
Date Deposited: 22 Jun 2023 09:09
Last Modified: 07 Feb 2024 15:27
URI: https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/58749

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item