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2.
New Phytol ; 234(3): 776-782, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35133656

ABSTRACT

The traditional separation between primary producers (autotrophs) and consumers (heterotrophs) at the base of the marine food web is being increasingly replaced by the paradigm that mixoplankton, planktonic protists with the nutritional ability to use both phago(hetero)trophy and photo(auto)trophy to access energy are widespread globally. Thus, many 'phytoplankton' eat, while 50% of 'protozooplankton' also perform photosynthesis. Mixotrophy may enhance primary production, biomass transfer to higher trophic levels and the efficiency of the biological pump to sequester atmospheric CO2 into the deep ocean. Although this view is gaining traction, science lacks a tool to quantify the relative contributions of autotrophy and heterotrophy in planktonic protists. This hinders our understanding of their impacts on carbon cycling within marine pelagic ecosystems. It has been shown that the hydrogen (H) isotopic signature of lipids is uniquely sensitive to heterotrophy relative to autotrophy in plants and bacteria. Here, we explored whether it is also sensitive to the trophic status in protists. The new understanding of H isotope signature of lipid biomarkers suggests it offers great potential as a novel tool for quantifying the prevalence of mixotrophy in diverse marine microorganisms and thus for investigating the implications of the 'mixoplankton' paradigm.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Autotrophic Processes , Biomarkers , Deuterium , Heterotrophic Processes
3.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 4073, 2020 08 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32811835

ABSTRACT

Concern over plastic pollution of the marine environment is severe. The mass-imbalance between the plastic litter supplied to and observed in the ocean currently suggests a missing sink. However, here we show that the ocean interior conceals high loads of small-sized plastic debris which can balance and even exceed the estimated plastic inputs into the ocean since 1950. The combined mass of just the three most-littered plastics (polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene) of 32-651 µm size-class suspended in the top 200 m of the Atlantic Ocean is 11.6-21.1 Million Tonnes. Considering that plastics of other sizes and polymer types will be found in the deeper ocean and in the sediments, our results indicate that both inputs and stocks of ocean plastics are much higher than determined previously. It is thus critical to assess these terms across all size categories and polymer groups to determine the fate and danger of plastic contamination.

4.
Environ Microbiol Rep ; 11(3): 386-400, 2019 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30246414

ABSTRACT

Suspended particles are major organic carbon substrates for heterotrophic microorganisms in the mesopelagic ocean (100-1000 m). Nonetheless, communities associated with these particles have been overlooked compared with sinking particles, the latter generally considered as main carbon transporters to the deep ocean. This study is the first to differentiate prokaryotic communities associated with suspended and sinking particles, collected with a marine snow catcher at four environmentally distinct stations in the Scotia Sea. Amplicon sequencing of 16S rRNA gene revealed distinct prokaryotic communities associated with the two particle-types in the mixed-layer (0-100 m) and upper-mesopelagic zone (mean dissimilarity 42.5% ± 15.2%). Although common remineralising taxa were present within both particle-types, gammaproteobacterial Pseudomonadales and Vibrionales, and alphaproteobacterial Rhodobacterales were found enriched in sinking particles up to 32-fold, while Flavobacteriales (Bacteroidetes) favoured suspended particles. We propose that this niche-partitioning may be driven by organic matter properties found within both particle-types: K-strategists, specialised in the degradation of complex organic compounds, thrived on semi-labile suspended particles, while generalists r-strategists were adapted to the transient labile organic contents of sinking particles. Differences between the two particle-associated communities were more pronounced in the mesopelagic than in the surface ocean, likely resulting from exchanges between particle-pools enabled by the stronger turbulence.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Prokaryotic Cells/physiology , Seawater/microbiology , Archaea/classification , Archaea/genetics , Archaea/isolation & purification , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Microbiota , Oceans and Seas , Organic Chemicals/analysis , Prokaryotic Cells/classification , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Seawater/chemistry
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(4): 1089-94, 2015 Jan 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25561526

ABSTRACT

The biological carbon pump, which transports particulate organic carbon (POC) from the surface to the deep ocean, plays an important role in regulating atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations. We know very little about geographical variability in the remineralization depth of this sinking material and less about what controls such variability. Here we present previously unpublished profiles of mesopelagic POC flux derived from neutrally buoyant sediment traps deployed in the North Atlantic, from which we calculate the remineralization length scale for each site. Combining these results with corresponding data from the North Pacific, we show that the observed variability in attenuation of vertical POC flux can largely be explained by temperature, with shallower remineralization occurring in warmer waters. This is seemingly inconsistent with conclusions drawn from earlier analyses of deep-sea sediment trap and export flux data, which suggest lowest transfer efficiency at high latitudes. However, the two patterns can be reconciled by considering relatively intense remineralization of a labile fraction of material in warm waters, followed by efficient downward transfer of the remaining refractory fraction, while in cold environments, a larger labile fraction undergoes slower remineralization that continues over a longer length scale. Based on the observed relationship, future increases in ocean temperature will likely lead to shallower remineralization of POC and hence reduced storage of CO2 by the ocean.

6.
Ecology ; 95(6): 1651-62, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25039229

ABSTRACT

It has been challenging to establish the mechanisms that link ecosystem functioning to environmental and resource variation, as well as community structure, composition, and compensatory dynamics. A compelling hypothesis of compensatory dynamics, known as "zero-sum" dynamics, is framed in terms of energy resource and demand units, where there is an inverse link between the number of individuals in a community and the mean individual metabolic rate. However, body size energy distributions that are nonuniform suggest a niche advantage at a particular size class, which suggests a limit to which metabolism can explain community structuring. Since 1989, the composition and structure of abyssal seafloor communities in the northeast Pacific and northeast Atlantic have varied interannually with links to climate and resource variation. Here, for the first time, class and mass-specific individual respiration rates were examined along with resource supply and time series of density and biomass data of the dominant abyssal megafauna, echinoderms. Both sites had inverse relationships between density and mean individual metabolic rate. We found fourfold variation in echinoderm respiration over interannual timescales at both sites, which were linked to shifts in species composition and structure. In the northeastern Pacific, the respiration of mobile surface deposit feeding echinoderms was positively linked to climate-driven particulate organic carbon fluxes with a temporal lag of about one year, respiring - 1-6% of the annual particulate organic carbon flux.


Subject(s)
Echinodermata/physiology , Ecosystem , Oxygen Consumption/physiology , Animals , Atlantic Ocean , Models, Biological , Pacific Ocean , Population Dynamics , Time Factors
7.
Nature ; 507(7493): 480-3, 2014 Mar 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24670767

ABSTRACT

Photosynthesis in the surface ocean produces approximately 100 gigatonnes of organic carbon per year, of which 5 to 15 per cent is exported to the deep ocean. The rate at which the sinking carbon is converted into carbon dioxide by heterotrophic organisms at depth is important in controlling oceanic carbon storage. It remains uncertain, however, to what extent surface ocean carbon supply meets the demand of water-column biota; the discrepancy between known carbon sources and sinks is as much as two orders of magnitude. Here we present field measurements, respiration rate estimates and a steady-state model that allow us to balance carbon sources and sinks to within observational uncertainties at the Porcupine Abyssal Plain site in the eastern North Atlantic Ocean. We find that prokaryotes are responsible for 70 to 92 per cent of the estimated remineralization in the twilight zone (depths of 50 to 1,000 metres) despite the fact that much of the organic carbon is exported in the form of large, fast-sinking particles accessible to larger zooplankton. We suggest that this occurs because zooplankton fragment and ingest half of the fast-sinking particles, of which more than 30 per cent may be released as suspended and slowly sinking matter, stimulating the deep-ocean microbial loop. The synergy between microbes and zooplankton in the twilight zone is important to our understanding of the processes controlling the oceanic carbon sink.


Subject(s)
Aquatic Organisms/metabolism , Carbon Cycle , Carbon/metabolism , Seawater , Animals , Atlantic Ocean , Biota , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Carbon Sequestration , Cell Respiration , Food Chain , Observation , Seawater/chemistry , Seawater/microbiology , Uncertainty , Zooplankton/metabolism
8.
Nature ; 457(7229): 577-80, 2009 Jan 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19177128

ABSTRACT

The addition of iron to high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll regions induces phytoplankton blooms that take up carbon. Carbon export from the surface layer and, in particular, the ability of the ocean and sediments to sequester carbon for many years remains, however, poorly quantified. Here we report data from the CROZEX experiment in the Southern Ocean, which was conducted to test the hypothesis that the observed north-south gradient in phytoplankton concentrations in the vicinity of the Crozet Islands is induced by natural iron fertilization that results in enhanced organic carbon flux to the deep ocean. We report annual particulate carbon fluxes out of the surface layer, at three kilometres below the ocean surface and to the ocean floor. We find that carbon fluxes from a highly productive, naturally iron-fertilized region of the sub-Antarctic Southern Ocean are two to three times larger than the carbon fluxes from an adjacent high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll area not fertilized by iron. Our findings support the hypothesis that increased iron supply to the glacial sub-Antarctic may have directly enhanced carbon export to the deep ocean. The CROZEX sequestration efficiency (the amount of carbon sequestered below the depth of winter mixing for a given iron supply) of 8,600 mol mol(-1) was 18 times greater than that of a phytoplankton bloom induced artificially by adding iron, but 77 times smaller than that of another bloom initiated, like CROZEX, by a natural supply of iron. Large losses of purposefully added iron can explain the lower efficiency of the induced bloom(6). The discrepancy between the blooms naturally supplied with iron may result in part from an underestimate of horizontal iron supply.


Subject(s)
Carbon/metabolism , Iron/metabolism , Seawater/chemistry , Antarctic Regions , Chlorophyll/analysis , Chlorophyll/metabolism , Chlorophyll A , Eutrophication , Geography , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Oceans and Seas , Phytoplankton/metabolism , Seasons , Time Factors
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