Species interaction networks are shaped by abiotic and biotic factors. Here, as part of the Tara Oceans project, we studied the photic zone interactome using environmental factors and organismal abundance profiles and found that environmental factors are incomplete predictors of community structure. We found associations across plankton functional types and phylogenetic groups to be nonrandomly distributed on the network and driven by both local and global patterns. We identified interactions among grazers, primary producers, viruses, and (mainly parasitic) symbionts and validated network-generated hypotheses using microscopy to confirm symbiotic relationships. We have thus provided a resource to support further research on ocean food webs and integrating biological components into ocean models.
Phosphorus (P) is a vital nutrient for all living organisms and may control the growth of bacteria in the ocean. Bacteria induce alkaline phosphatases when inorganic phosphate (Pi) is insufficient to meet their P-requirements, and therefore bulk alkaline phosphatase activity measurements have been used to assess the P-status of microbial assemblages. In this study, the molecular basis of marine bacterial phosphatases and their potential role in the environment were investigated. We found that only a limited number of homologs to the classical Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase (PhoA) were present in marine isolates in the Bacteroidetes and γ-proteobacteria lineages. In contrast, PhoX, a recently described phosphatase, was widely distributed among diverse bacterial taxa, including Cyanobacteria, and frequently found in the marine metagenomic Global Ocean Survey database. These taxa included ecologically important groups such as Roseobacter and Trichodesmium. PhoX was induced solely upon P-starvation and accounted for approximately 90% of the phosphatase activity in the model marine bacterium Silicibacter pomeroyi. Analysis of the available transcriptomic datasets and their corresponding metagenomes indicated that PhoX is more abundant than PhoA in oligotrophic marine environments such as the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre. Those analyses also revealed that PhoA may be important when Bacteroidetes are abundant, such as in algal bloom episodes. However, PhoX appears to be much more widespread. Its identification as a gene that mediates organic P acquisition in ecologically important groups, and as a marker of Pi-stress, constitutes an important step toward a better understanding of the marine P cycle.
Background: The ocean microbiota modulates global biogeochemical cycles and changes in its configuration may have large-scale consequences. Yet, the underlying ecological mechanisms structuring it are unclear. Here, we investigate how fundamental ecological mechanisms (selection, dispersal and ecological drift) shape the smallest members of the tropical and subtropical surface-ocean microbiota: prokaryotes and minute eukaryotes (picoeukaryotes). Furthermore, we investigate the agents exerting abiotic selection on this assemblage as well as the spatial patterns emerging from the action of ecological mechanisms. To explore this, we analysed the composition of surface-ocean prokaryotic and picoeukaryotic communities using DNA-sequence data (16S-and 18S-rRNA genes) collected during the circumglobal expeditions Malaspina-2010 and TARA-Oceans. Results: We found that the two main components of the tropical and subtropical surface-ocean microbiota, prokaryotes and picoeukaryotes, appear to be structured by different ecological mechanisms. Picoeukaryotic communities were predominantly structured by dispersal-limitation, while prokaryotic counterparts appeared to be shaped by the combined action of dispersal-limitation, selection and drift. Temperature-driven selection appeared as a major factor, out of a few selected factors, influencing species co-occurrence networks in prokaryotes but not in picoeukaryotes, indicating that association patterns may contribute to understand ocean microbiota structure and response to selection. Other measured abiotic variables seemed to have limited selective effects on community structure in the tropical and subtropical ocean. Picoeukaryotes displayed a higher spatial differentiation between communities and a higher distance decay when compared to prokaryotes, consistent with a scenario of higher dispersal limitation in the former after considering environmental heterogeneity. Lastly, random dynamics or drift seemed to have a more important role in structuring prokaryotic communities than picoeukaryotic counterparts.
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