Microbial food web dynamics in response to a Saharan dust event: Results from a mesocosm study in the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea

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Abstract

The significant impact of dust deposition on heterotrophic bacterial dynamics in the surface oligotrophic ocean has recently been evidenced. Considering the central role of bacteria in the microbial loop, it is likely that dust deposition also affects the structure and the functioning of the whole microbial food web. In the frame of the DUNE project, aiming to estimate the impact of dust deposition on the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea through mesocosm experiments, the main goal of the present paper was to assess how two successive dust deposition events affect the dynamics of the microbial food web. The first dust seeding delivered new P and N to the amended mesocosms and resulted in a pronounced stimulation of bacterial respiration. It also induced pronounced, but transient, changes in the bacterial community composition. No significant effects were observed on the abundances of viruses and heterotrophic nanoflagellates. The second dust seeding also delivered new P and N to the amended mesocosms, but the effect on the microbial food web was very different. Bacterial respiration remained constant and bacterial abundance decreased. Compositional changes following the second seeding were minor compared to the first one. The decrease in bacterial abundance coincided with an increase in virus abundance, resulting in higher virus:bacteria ratios throughout the second seeding period. Our study shows that dust deposition to the surface oligotrophic ocean may involve important modifications of the trophic links among the components of the microbial food web with presumed consequences on C and nutrient cycling.

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  • Table 1. Initial biogeochemical conditions of seawater in the DUNE-R experiment (average for C-, D-mesocosms and OUT samples). DIP: dissolved inorganic phosphorus; DL: detection limit (0.03 µM for NO−3 ). Values for chlorophyll a, DIP, NO − 3 and dFe data are average concentrations at surface, 5 m and 10 m depth. Value for primary production is the mean rate at 5 m depth.
  • Figure 1. Dissolved inorganic phosphorus (nM, mean± standard deviation of three replicate mesocosms) in D- and C-mesocosms and OUT samples at surface (a), 5 m (b) and 10 m (c) depth during the DUNE-R experiment. Grey vertical bars represent the dust seedings.
  • Figure 2. Bacterial abundance (cell mL−1, mean± standard deviation of three replicate mesocosms) in D- and C-mesocosms and OUT samples at surface (a), 5 m (b) and 10 m (c) depth during the DUNE-R experiment. Grey vertical bars represent the dust seedings.
  • Figure 3. Bacterial respiration (µmol C L−1 d−1, mean± standard deviation of three replicate mesocosms) in D- and C-mesocosms and OUT samples at 5 m depth during the DUNE-R experiment. Grey vertical bars represent the dust seedings.
  • Figure 4. Changes in the relative abundance of total (a) and active (b) OTUs in response to dust addition at 5 m depth during the DUNE-R experiment. Positive changes indicate higher, and negative changes indicate lower relative abundance in dust than in control mesocosms. Changes in relative abundances are expressed as percent of the total community. Only OTUs with significantly different relative abundances in the dust and control-mesocosms are shown. See Material and Methods for more details.
  • Figure 5. Diversity (Simpson index) of the total (squares) and active (triangles) bacterial community in D- (filled symbols) and Cmesocosms (empty symbols) at 5 m depth during the DUNE-R experiment. Grey vertical bars represent the dust seedings.
  • Figure 6. Virus abundance (particle mL−1, mean± standard deviation of three replicate mesocosms) in D- and C-mesocosms and OUT samples at surface (a), 5 m (b) and 10 m (c) depth during the DUNE-R experiment. Grey vertical bars represent the dust seedings.
  • Figure 7. Ratios virus and bacterial abundance (mean± standard deviation of three replicate mesocosms) in D- and C-mesocosms and OUT samples at surface (a), 5 m (b) and 10 m (c) depth during the DUNE-R experiment. Grey vertical bars represent the dust seedings.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Pulido-Villena, E., Baudoux, A. C., Obernosterer, I., Landa, M., Caparros, J., Catala, P., … Guieu, C. (2014). Microbial food web dynamics in response to a Saharan dust event: Results from a mesocosm study in the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea. Biogeosciences, 11(19), 5607–5619. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-11-5607-2014

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