Over het archief
Het OWA, het open archief van het Waterbouwkundig Laboratorium heeft tot doel alle vrij toegankelijke onderzoeksresultaten van dit instituut in digitale vorm aan te bieden. Op die manier wil het de zichtbaarheid, verspreiding en gebruik van deze onderzoeksresultaten, alsook de wetenschappelijke communicatie maximaal bevorderen.
Dit archief wordt uitgebouwd en beheerd volgens de principes van de Open Access Movement, en het daaruit ontstane Open Archives Initiative.
Basisinformatie over ‘Open Access to scholarly information'.
Significance of viral activity for regulating heterotrophic prokaryote community dynamics along a meridional gradient of stratification in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean
Mojica, K.D.A.; Brussaard, C.P.D. (2020). Significance of viral activity for regulating heterotrophic prokaryote community dynamics along a meridional gradient of stratification in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean. Viruses 12(11): 1293. https://doi.org/10.3390/v12111293
In: Viruses. MDPI: Basel. e-ISSN 1999-4915, meer
| |
Author keywords |
bacterial production; marine viruses; mortality; lytic infection; lysogeny; protozoan grazing; carbon cycling; HNA; LNA |
Auteurs | | Top |
- Mojica, K.D.A., meer
- Brussaard, C.P.D., meer
|
|
|
Abstract |
How microbial populations interact influences the availability and flux of organic carbon in the ocean. Understanding how these interactions vary over broad spatial scales is therefore a fundamental aim of microbial oceanography. In this study, we assessed variations in the abundances, production, virus and grazing induced mortality of heterotrophic prokaryotes during summer along a meridional gradient in stratification in the North Atlantic Ocean. Heterotrophic prokaryote abundance and activity varied with phytoplankton biomass, while the relative distribution of prokaryotic subpopulations (ratio of high nucleic acid fluorescent (HNA) and low nucleic acid fluorescent (LNA) cells) was significantly correlated to phytoplankton mortality mode (i.e., viral lysis to grazing rate ratio). Virus-mediate morality was the primary loss process regulating the heterotrophic prokaryotic communities (average 55% of the total mortality), which may be attributed to the strong top-down regulation of the bacterivorous protozoans. Host availability, encounter rate, and HNA:LNA were important factors regulating viral dynamics. Conversely, the abundance and activity of bacterivorous protozoans were largely regulated by temperature and turbulence. The ratio of total microbial mediated mortality to total available prokaryote carbon reveals that over the latitudinal gradient the heterotrophic prokaryote community gradually moved from a near steady state system regulated by high turnover in subtropical region to net heterotrophic production in the temperate region |
IMIS is ontwikkeld en wordt gehost door het VLIZ.