Due to sampling difficulties, little is known about microbial communities associated with sinking marine snow in the twilight zone. A drifting sediment trap was equipped with a viscous cryogel and deployed to collect intact marine snow from depths of 100 and 400 m off Cape Blanc (Mauritania). Marine snow aggregates were fixed and washed in situ to prevent changes in microbial community composition and to enable subsequent analysis using catalyzed reporter deposition fluorescence in situ hybridization (CARD-FISH). The attached microbial communities collected at 100 m were similar to the free-living community at the depth of the fluorescence maximum (20 m) but different from those at other depths (150, 400, 550, and 700 m). Therefore, the attached microbial community seemed to be "inherited" from that at the fluorescence maximum. The attached microbial community structure at 400 m differed from that of the attached community at 100 m and from that of any free-living community at the tested depths, except that collected near the sediment at 700 m. The differences between the particle-associated communities at 400 m and 100 m appeared to be due to internal changes in the attached microbial community rather than de novo colonization, detachment, or grazing during the sinking of marine snow. The new sampling method presented here will facilitate future investigations into the mechanisms that shape the bacterial community within sinking marine snow, leading to better understanding of the mechanisms which regulate biogeochemical cycling of settling organic matter.T he formation of macroscopic organic aggregates such as marine snow is an important process for the removal of photosynthetically fixed carbon from the surface ocean to the deep sea (1). The export of organic matter is the main driver for the oceanic sequestering of atmospheric carbon dioxide on long time scales (2).Settling marine snow aggregates harbor diverse microbial communities that play an important role in the degradation of the organic compounds and release of dissolved nutrients and organic matter to the water column (3-5). Therefore, the attached microbial communities may play an important role in the regulation of the magnitude and efficiency of the biological carbon pump. However, little is known about bacterial community composition and dynamics within marine snow collected below the depths reached by scuba divers. This is because the fragile nature of marine snow makes the collection of individual, intact marine snow particles nearly impossible.Previous investigations have relied on size fractionation of water samples to observe and compare clustering of free-living bacteria to that of bacteria associated with particles (5-8). These studies observed that the composition of the microbial communities associated with particles differed from that of free-living communities in the surrounding water column. However, other studies have found similarities between the free-living and attached microbial communities (9-11), potentially indicating methodolo...