The blue-excitable nucleic acid-binding fluorochromes, TOT0 and TO-PRO, were used to stain bacteria in marine plankton communities. Flow cytometric counts of cells stained with these dyes agreed well with counts made by epifluorescence microscopy of DAPI-stained cells. We have used these new dyes in a study of bacteria from various waters in the North Atlantic and the eastern Mediterranean. The results indicate a distinction among bacterial groups of different fluorescence intensities (apparent DNA content). At large spatial and temporal scales, about half of the variation in the percentage of bacteria with high apparent DNA content (termed group II bacteria) could be explained by the variation in chlorophyll. Further, the apparent mean DNA content of group II bacteria was also correlated with chlorophyll.
Global abundance of marine bacteria was investigated at the annual climatological scale. In surface waters of diverse marine habitats, the annual average abundances of heterotrophic bacteria and the photosynthetic cyanobacterium Synechococcus are directly related to annual average temperature below 14°C. Notably, average nitrate concentrations at the surface are never high where the temperature is above 14°C. These results suggest that, over the course of a year, temperature is the dominant factor affecting bacterial growth and loss in colder waters. Other factors, such as substrate supply, may be important in warmer waters.
Surface populations of Oscillatoria thiebautii (Corn.) Geitler in the Caribbean Sea are exposed to photoinhibiting irradiances throughout most of the 12-h light period. Oxygen inhibition of carbon assimilation at high irradiance suggested that photoinhibition was partly due to photorespiration.The pattern of carbon flow into the major end products of photosynthesis appeared to be the same for a given photosynthetic rate regardless of irradiance level. At one station, enhanced relative rates of protein synthesis were observed at low rates of photosynthesis. At another station, this effect was not observed but the proportion of 14C in polysaccharide was low while that in metabolites was high. On the basis of previous findings, colonies at the second station were interpreted to have been in a nutritionally poor state. The rates at which intracellular macromolecular pools approached saturation seemed to depend on the rate of photosynthesis.Diel estimates of in situ carbon photoassimilation rates and dark carbon loss rate lead to an estimate of carbon doubling time for surface Oscillatoria populations of 18 days.
The concept and methods of ecological diversity in communities were applied to phytoplankton categorized by flow cytometric measurements related to size and chlorophyll content. Each cytometric signature was condensed to single numerical values indicative of diversity and evenness. Measurements pooled from studies disparate in temporal and spatial scales indicated greater chlorophyll biomass and primary production with greater cytometric diversity and evenness. Future development of these ideas may help link biological oceanographic processes with patterns established through ecological processes at the community level.
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