The Yellow Sea features unique characteristics due to strong tides and nutrient-enriched freshwater outflows from China and Korea. The coupling of archaeal and bacterial assemblages associated with environmental factors at two bay areas in the Yellow Sea was investigated. Temporal variations of the archaeal and bacterial assemblages were shown to be greater than the spatial variations based on an analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequences. Distinct temporal dynamics of both planktonic archaeal and bacterial assemblages was associated with temperature, NO
2
-
, and chlorophyll a ([chl-
a
]) concentrations in the bays of the Yellow Sea. The [chl-
a
] was the prime predictor of bacterial abundance, and some taxa were clearly correlated with [chl-
a
].
Bacteroidetes
and
Alpha-proteobacteria
dominated at high [chl-
a
] stations while
Gamma-proteobacteria
(esp. SAR86 clade) and
Actinobacteria
(
Candidatus
Actinomarina clade) were abundant at low [chl-
a
] stations. The archaeal abundance was comparable with the bacterial abundance in most of the October samples. Co-dominance of Marine Group II (MGII) and
Candidatus
Nitrosopumilus suggests that the assimilation of organic nitrogen by MGII could be coupled with nitrification by ammonia-oxidizing archaea. The distinct temporal dynamics of the archaeal and bacterial assemblages might be attributable to the strong tides and the inflow of nutrient-rich freshwater.
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