114 results on '"Giacomo R. DiTullio"'
Search Results
2. Rebound of shelf water salinity in the Ross Sea
- Author
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Pasquale Castagno, Vincenzo Capozzi, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Pierpaolo Falco, Giannetta Fusco, Stephen R. Rintoul, Giancarlo Spezie, and Giorgio Budillon
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Ross Sea Bottom Water, a major source of Antarctic Bottom Water, has experienced significant freshening in recent decades. Here the authors use 23 years of summer measurements to document temporal variability in the salinity of the Ross Sea High Salinity Shelf Water (HSSW) and found that HSSW salinity decreased between 1995 and 2014 and rebounded sharply after 2014.
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- 2019
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3. In situ determination of cellular DMSP and pigment quotas in a Prorocentrum minimum bloom near the Falkland Islands
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Tyler Cyronak, Erin O’Reilly, Peter A. Lee, and Giacomo R. DiTullio
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dimethylsulfoniopropionate, Patagonian shelf, dinoflagellate, pigments, sorting flow cytometer ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Marine phytoplankton play critical roles in the biogeochemistry of open and coastal oceans. However, the impact that individual species have on an ecosystem-wide scale can strongly depend on the production of cellular compounds, especially those that are climatically active such as dimethylsulfide (DMS). Herein, we use sorting flow cytometry to separate a distinct phytoplankton population from four samples taken along the Patagonian shelf near the Falkland Islands. Morphological, genetic, and biochemical analyses demonstrated that three of the sorted samples were dominated by a bloom of the dinoflagellate Prorocentrum minimum. Cellular quotas of the DMS-precursor dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) ranged from 1.23–4.11 pg cell−1 in the same population at different sampling stations. Causes of this variability may be due to different growth stages of the P. minimum bloom or changes in other environmental variables. Overall, in situ intracellular DMSP concentrations were lower than what would be expected based on previous, culture-based measurements. We demonstrate the difficulties inherent in sorting individual phytoplankton species from natural samples in order to determine in situ species-specific cellular quotas of important biogeochemical compounds.
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- 2014
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4. Iron limitation of a springtime bacterial and phytoplankton community in the Ross Sea: implications for vitamin B12 nutrition
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Erin M. Bertrand, Mak A. Saito, Peter A. Lee, Robert B. Dunbar, Peter N. Sedwick, and Giacomo R. DiTullio
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Bacteria ,Phytoplankton ,colimitation ,iron fertilization ,Iron limitation ,Ross Sea ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
The Ross Sea is home to some of the largest phytoplankton blooms in the Southern Ocean. Primary production in this system has previously been shown to be iron limited in the summer and periodically iron and vitamin B12 colimited. In this study, we examined trace metal limitation of biological activity in the Ross Sea in the austral spring and considered possible implications for vitamin B12 nutrition. Bottle incubation experiments demonstrated that iron limited phytoplankton growth in the austral spring while B12, cobalt, and zinc did not. This is the first demonstration of iron limitation in a Phaeocystis antarctica-dominated, early season Ross Sea phytoplankton community. The lack of B12 limitation in this location is consistent with previous Ross Sea studies in the austral summer, wherein vitamin additions did not stimulate P. antarctica growth and B12 was limiting only when bacterial abundance was low. Bottle incubation experiments and a bacterial regrowth experiment also revealed that iron addition directly enhanced bacterial growth. B12 uptake measurements in natural water samples and in an iron fertilized bottle incubation demonstrated that bacteria serve not only as a source for vitamin B12, but also as a significant sink, and that iron additions enhanced B12 uptake rates in phytoplankton but not bacteria. Additionally, vitamin uptake rates did not become saturated upon the addition of up to 95 pM B12. A rapid B12 uptake rate was observed after 13 min, which then decreased to a slower constant uptake rate over the next 52 hours. Results from this study highlight the importance of iron availability in limiting early season Ross Sea phytoplankton growth and suggest that rates of vitamin B12 production and consumption may be impacted by iron availability.
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- 2011
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5. Low Cobalt Inventories in the Amundsen and Ross Seas Driven by High Demand for Labile Cobalt Uptake Among Native Phytoplankton Communities
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Rebecca J. Chmiel, Riss M. Kellogg, Deepa Rao, Dawn M. Moran, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Mak A. Saito
- Abstract
Cobalt (Co) is a scarce but essential micronutrient for marine plankton in the Southern Ocean and coastal Antarctic seas where dissolved cobalt (dCo) concentrations can be extremely low. This study presents total dCo and labile dCo distributions measured via shipboard voltammetry in the Amundsen Sea, Ross Sea and Terra Nova Bay during the CICLOPS (Cobalamin and Iron Co-Limitation of Phytoplankton Species) expedition. A significantly smaller dCo inventory was observed during the 2017/2018 CICLOPS expedition compared to two 2005/2006 expeditions to the Ross Sea conducted over a decade earlier. The dCo inventory loss (~10–20 pM) was present in both the surface and deep ocean and was attributed to the loss of labile dCo, resulting in the near-complete complexation of dCo by strong ligands in the photic zone. A changing dCo inventory in Antarctic coastal seas could be driven by the alleviation of iron (Fe) limitation in coastal areas where the flux of Fe-rich sediments from melting ice shelves and deep sediment resuspension may have shifted the region towards vitamin B12 and/or zinc (Zn) limitation, both of which are likely to increase the demand for Co among marine plankton. High demand for Zn by phytoplankton can result in increased Co and cadmium (Cd) uptake because these metals often share the same metal uptake transporters. This study compared the magnitudes and ratios of Zn, Cd and Co uptake (ρ) across upper ocean profiles and observed order of magnitude uptake trends (ρZn > ρCd > ρCo) that paralleled the trace metal concentrations in seawater. High rates of Co and Zn uptake were observed throughout the region, and the speciation of available Co and Zn appeared to influence trends in dissolved metal : phosphate stoichiometry and uptake rates over depth. Multi-year loss of the dCo inventory throughout the water column may be explained by an increase in Co uptake into particulate organic matter (POM) and subsequent increased flux of Co into sediments via sinking and burial. This perturbation of the Southern Ocean Co biogeochemical cycle could signal changes in the nutrient limitation regimes, phytoplankton bloom composition, and carbon sequestration sink of the Southern Ocean.
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- 2023
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6. Dinoflagellates alter their carbon and nutrient metabolic strategies across environmental gradients in the central Pacific Ocean
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Jaclyn K. Saunders, Christopher L. Dupont, Michael L. Brosnahan, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Carl H. Lamborg, Noelle A. Held, Dawn M. Moran, Matthew R. McIlvin, Mak A. Saito, Andrew E. Allen, John P. McCrow, Nicholas J. Hawco, and Natalie R. Cohen
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Microbiology (medical) ,0303 health sciences ,Nutrient cycle ,biology ,030306 microbiology ,Mesopelagic zone ,Immunology ,Dinoflagellate ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Carbon cycle ,03 medical and health sciences ,Oceanography ,Nutrient ,Genetics ,Environmental science ,Upwelling ,Photic zone ,Ecosystem ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Marine microeukaryotes play a fundamental role in biogeochemical cycling through the transfer of energy to higher trophic levels and vertical carbon transport. Despite their global importance, microeukaryote physiology, nutrient metabolism and contributions to carbon cycling across offshore ecosystems are poorly characterized. Here, we observed the prevalence of dinoflagellates along a 4,600-km meridional transect extending across the central Pacific Ocean, where oligotrophic gyres meet equatorial upwelling waters rich in macronutrients yet low in dissolved iron. A combined multi-omics and geochemical analysis provided a window into dinoflagellate metabolism across the transect, indicating a continuous taxonomic dinoflagellate community that shifted its functional transcriptome and proteome as it extended from the euphotic to the mesopelagic zone. In euphotic waters, multi-omics data suggested that a combination of trophic modes were utilized, while mesopelagic metabolism was marked by cytoskeletal investments and nutrient recycling. Rearrangement in nutrient metabolism was evident in response to variable nitrogen and iron regimes across the gradient, with no associated change in community assemblage. Total dinoflagellate proteins scaled with particulate carbon export, with both elevated in equatorial waters, suggesting a link between dinoflagellate abundance and total carbon flux. Dinoflagellates employ numerous metabolic strategies that enable broad occupation of central Pacific ecosystems and play a dual role in carbon transformation through both photosynthetic fixation in the euphotic zone and remineralization in the mesopelagic zone.
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- 2021
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7. Adaptive responses of marine diatoms to zinc scarcity and ecological implications
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Riss M. Kellogg, Mark A. Moosburner, Natalie R. Cohen, Nicholas J. Hawco, Matthew R. McIlvin, Dawn M. Moran, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Adam V. Subhas, Andrew E. Allen, and Mak A. Saito
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Diatoms ,Proteomics ,Zinc ,Multidisciplinary ,fungi ,Phytoplankton ,General Physics and Astronomy ,General Chemistry ,Acids ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
Scarce dissolved surface ocean concentrations of the essential algal micronutrient zinc suggest that Zn may influence the growth of phytoplankton such as diatoms, which are major contributors to marine primary productivity. However, the specific mechanisms by which diatoms acclimate to Zn deficiency are poorly understood. Using global proteomic analysis, we identified two proteins (ZCRP-A/B, Zn/Co Responsive Protein A/B) among four diatom species that became abundant under Zn/Co limitation. Characterization using reverse genetic techniques and homology data suggests putative Zn/Co chaperone and membrane-bound transport complex component roles for ZCRP-A (a COG0523 domain protein) and ZCRP-B, respectively. Metaproteomic detection of ZCRPs along a Pacific Ocean transect revealed increased abundances at the surface (
- Published
- 2021
8. Inhibited Manganese Oxide Formation Hinders Cobalt Scavenging in the Ross Sea
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, Véronique E. Oldham, Rebecca Chmiel, Mak A. Saito, Colleen M. Hansel, and Deepa Rao
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0106 biological sciences ,Atmospheric Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Manganese ,Manganese oxide ,01 natural sciences ,Redox ,chemistry ,Environmental Chemistry ,Cobalt ,Scavenging ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Nuclear chemistry - Published
- 2021
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9. Minimal cobalt metabolism in the marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus
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Mak A. Saito, Tyler J. Goepfert, Randelle M. Bundy, Dawn M. Moran, Alessandro Tagliabue, Matthew M. McIlvin, Luis Valentin-Alvarado, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Nicholas J. Hawco
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Proteomics ,Cyanobacteria ,inorganic chemicals ,Aquatic Organisms ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Iron ,chemistry.chemical_element ,01 natural sciences ,Cofactor ,Metal ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nutrient ,Seawater ,Biomass ,Life Below Water ,Phylogeny ,Prochlorococcus ,030304 developmental biology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,nutrient limitation ,0303 health sciences ,Biomass (ecology) ,Genome ,Pacific Ocean ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Bacterial ,Cobalt ,vitamin B12 ,Metabolism ,biology.organism_classification ,Vitamin B 12 ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,visual_art ,biology.protein ,visual_art.visual_art_medium - Abstract
Despite very low concentrations of cobalt in marine waters, cyanobacteria in the genus Prochlorococcus retain the genetic machinery for the synthesis and use of cobalt-bearing cofactors (cobalamins) in their genomes. We explore cobalt metabolism in a Prochlorococcus isolate from the equatorial Pacific Ocean (strain MIT9215) through a series of growth experiments under iron- and cobalt-limiting conditions. Metal uptake rates, quantitative proteomic measurements of cobalamin-dependent enzymes, and theoretical calculations all indicate that Prochlorococcus MIT9215 can sustain growth with less than 50 cobalt atoms per cell, ∼100-fold lower than minimum iron requirements for these cells (∼5,100 atoms per cell). Quantitative descriptions of Prochlorococcus cobalt limitation are used to interpret the cobalt distribution in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, where surface concentrations are among the lowest measured globally but Prochlorococcus biomass is high. A low minimum cobalt quota ensures that other nutrients, notably iron, will be exhausted before cobalt can be fully depleted, helping to explain the persistence of cobalt-dependent metabolism in marine cyanobacteria.
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- 2020
10. Minimal cobalt metabolism in the marine cyanobacterium
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Nicholas J, Hawco, Matthew M, McIlvin, Randelle M, Bundy, Alessandro, Tagliabue, Tyler J, Goepfert, Dawn M, Moran, Luis, Valentin-Alvarado, Giacomo R, DiTullio, and Mak A, Saito
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inorganic chemicals ,Proteomics ,Aquatic Organisms ,Vitamin B 12 ,Pacific Ocean ,Iron ,Seawater ,Biomass ,Cobalt ,Biological Sciences ,Genome, Bacterial ,Phylogeny ,Prochlorococcus - Abstract
Despite very low concentrations of cobalt in marine waters, cyanobacteria in the genus Prochlorococcus retain the genetic machinery for the synthesis and use of cobalt-bearing cofactors (cobalamins) in their genomes. We explore cobalt metabolism in a Prochlorococcus isolate from the equatorial Pacific Ocean (strain MIT9215) through a series of growth experiments under iron- and cobalt-limiting conditions. Metal uptake rates, quantitative proteomic measurements of cobalamin-dependent enzymes, and theoretical calculations all indicate that Prochlorococcus MIT9215 can sustain growth with less than 50 cobalt atoms per cell, ∼100-fold lower than minimum iron requirements for these cells (∼5,100 atoms per cell). Quantitative descriptions of Prochlorococcus cobalt limitation are used to interpret the cobalt distribution in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, where surface concentrations are among the lowest measured globally but Prochlorococcus biomass is high. A low minimum cobalt quota ensures that other nutrients, notably iron, will be exhausted before cobalt can be fully depleted, helping to explain the persistence of cobalt-dependent metabolism in marine cyanobacteria.
- Published
- 2020
11. Colony formation in Phaeocystis antarctica: connecting molecular mechanisms with iron biogeochemistry
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Jonathan H. Badger, Matthew R. McIlvin, Hong Zheng, Sara J. Bender, Andrew E. Allen, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Mak A. Saito, Dawn M. Moran, and John P. McCrow
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0301 basic medicine ,biology ,Chemistry ,Biogeochemistry ,Chaetoceros ,biology.organism_classification ,03 medical and health sciences ,Multicellular organism ,030104 developmental biology ,Diatom ,Biochemistry ,Proteome ,Flagellate ,Bloom ,Plastocyanin ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Phaeocystis antarctica is an important phytoplankter of the Ross Sea where it dominates the early season bloom after sea ice retreat and is a major contributor to carbon export. The factors that influence Phaeocystis colony formation and the resultant Ross Sea bloom initiation have been of great scientific interest, yet there is little known about the underlying mechanisms responsible for these phenomena. Here, we present laboratory and field studies on Phaeocystis antarctica grown under multiple iron conditions using a coupled proteomic and transcriptomic approach. P. antarctica had a lower iron limitation threshold than a Ross Sea diatom Chaetoceros sp., and at increased iron nutrition (> 120 pM Fe') a shift from flagellate cells to a majority of colonial cells in P. antarctica was observed, implying a role for iron as a trigger for colony formation. Proteome analysis revealed an extensive and coordinated shift in proteome structure linked to iron availability and life cycle transitions with 327 and 436 proteins measured as significantly different between low and high iron in strains 1871 and 1374, respectively. The enzymes flavodoxin and plastocyanin that can functionally replace iron metalloenzymes were observed at low iron treatments consistent with cellular iron-sparing strategies, with plastocyanin having a larger dynamic range. The numerous isoforms of the putative iron-starvation-induced protein (ISIP) group (ISIP2A and ISIP3) had abundance patterns coinciding with that of either low or high iron (and coincident flagellate or the colonial cell types in strain 1871), implying that there may be specific iron acquisition systems for each life cycle type. The proteome analysis also revealed numerous structural proteins associated with each cell type: within flagellate cells actin and tubulin from flagella and haptonema structures as well as a suite of calcium-binding proteins with EF domains were observed. In the colony-dominated samples a variety of structural proteins were observed that are also often found in multicellular organisms including spondins, lectins, fibrillins, and glycoproteins with von Willebrand domains. A large number of proteins of unknown function were identified that became abundant at either high or low iron availability. These results were compared to the first metaproteomic analysis of a Ross Sea Phaeocystis bloom to connect the mechanistic information to the in situ ecology and biogeochemistry. Proteins associated with both flagellate and colonial cells were observed in the bloom sample consistent with the need for both cell types within a growing bloom. Bacterial iron storage and B12 biosynthesis proteins were also observed consistent with chemical synergies within the colony microbiome to cope with the biogeochemical conditions. Together these responses reveal a complex, highly coordinated effort by P. antarctica to regulate its phenotype at the molecular level in response to iron and provide a window into the biology, ecology, and biogeochemistry of this group.
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- 2018
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12. Alkenone unsaturation during virus infection of Emiliania huxleyi
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B. Jacob Kendrick, James M. Fulton, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Benjamin A. S. Van Mooy
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0301 basic medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sea surface temperature ,Degree of unsaturation ,Alkenone ,030104 developmental biology ,Oceanography ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,fungi ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Virus ,Emiliania huxleyi - Abstract
Alkenones are found in diverse prymnesiophytes including Emiliania huxleyi , which ranges throughout the world ocean. The number of double bonds in alkenones corresponds with growth temperature, and calibrations between sea surface temperature and alkenone unsaturation have been used to establish alkenone unsaturation as a temperature proxy in ancient sediments. Here we report virus infection causes a relative increase in the proportion of diunsaturated alkenones in E. huxleyi strain CCMP 374. As virus infection routinely terminates E. huxleyi blooms in the ocean, it is possible that this contributes to the variance in alkenone-based temperature estimates for core-top sediments.
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- 2017
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13. Thaumarchaeal ecotype distributions across the equatorial Pacific Ocean and their potential roles in nitrification and sinking flux attenuation
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Mak A. Saito, Alyson E. Santoro, Carl H. Lamborg, Tyler J. Goepfert, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Christopher L. Dupont
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0301 basic medicine ,Biogeochemical cycle ,Ecotype ,Mesopelagic zone ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Ammonia volatilization from urea ,Ammonia monooxygenase ,16. Peace & justice ,Oceanography ,Nitrogen ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Water column ,chemistry ,13. Climate action ,Environmental chemistry ,Nitrification ,14. Life underwater - Abstract
Thaumarchaea are among the most abundant microbial groups in the ocean, but controls on their abundance and the distribution and metabolic potential of different subpopulations are poorly constrained. Here, two ecotypes of ammonia-oxidizing thaumarchaea were quantified using ammonia monooxygenase (amoA) genes across the equatorial Pacific Ocean. The shallow, or water column “A” (WCA), ecotype was the most abundant ecotype at the depths of maximum nitrification rates, and its abundance correlated with other biogeochemical indicators of remineralization such as NO3 : Si and total Hg. Metagenomes contained thaumarchaeal genes encoding for the catalytic subunit of the urease enzyme (ureC) at all depths, suggesting that members of both WCA and the deep, water column “B” (WCB) ecotypes may contain ureC. Coupled urea hydrolysis-ammonia oxidation rates were similar to ammonia oxidation rates alone, suggesting that urea could be an important source of ammonia for mesopelagic ammonia oxidizers. Potential inducement of metal limitation of both ammonia oxidation and urea hydrolysis was demonstrated via additions of a strong metal chelator. The water column inventory of WCA was correlated with the depth-integrated abundance of WCB, with both likely controlled by the flux of sinking particulate organic matter, providing strong evidence of vertical connectivity between the ecotypes. Further, depth-integrated amoA gene abundance and nitrification rates were correlated with particulate organic nitrogen flux measured by contemporaneously deployed sediment traps. Together, the results refine our understanding of the controls on thaumarchaeal distributions in the ocean, and provide new insights on the relationship between material flux and microbial communities in the mesopelagic.
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- 2017
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14. Biogeochemical and ecological variability during the late summer–early autumn transition at an ice‐floe drift station in the Central Arctic Ocean
- Author
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, Olga Mangoni, Christian Katlein, Mario Hoppmann, Francesco Bolinesi, Philipp Anhaus, Nicole L. Schanke, Peter A. Lee, Schanke, Nicole L., Bolinesi, Francesco, Mangoni, Olga, Katlein, Christian, Anhaus, Philipp, Hoppmann, Mario, Lee, Peter A., and Ditullio, Giacomo R.
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0106 biological sciences ,Biogeochemical cycle ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Dimethylsulfoniopropionate ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Water column ,Phytoplankton ,Pyramimonas ,Sea ice ,14. Life underwater ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Biogeochemistry ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry ,Arctic ,13. Climate action ,Environmental science - Abstract
As the annual expanse of Arctic summer ice‐cover steadily decreases, concomitant biogeochemical and ecological changes in this region are likely to occur. Because the Central Arctic Ocean is often nutrient and light limited, it is essential to understand how environmental changes will affect productivity, phytoplankton species composition, and ensuing changes in biogeochemistry in the region. During the transition from late summer to early autumn, water column sampling of various biogeochemical parameters was conducted along an ice‐floe drift station near the North Pole. Our results show that as the upper water column stratification weakened during the late summer–early autumn transition, nutrient concentrations, particulate dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSPp) levels, photosynthetic efficiency, and biological productivity, as estimated by ΔO2/Ar ratios, all decreased. Chemotaxonomic (CHEMTAX) analysis of phytoplankton pigments revealed a taxonomically diverse picoautotrophic community, with chlorophyll (Chl) c3‐containing flagellates and the prasinophyte, Pyramimonas spp., as the most abundant groups, comprising ~ 30% and 20% of the total Chl a (TChl a) biomass, respectively. In contrast to previous studies, the picoprasinophyte, Micromonas spp., represented only 5% to 10% of the TChl a biomass. Of the nine taxonomic groups identified, DMSPp was most closely associated with Pyramimonas spp., a Chl b‐containing species not usually considered a high DMSP producer. As the extent and duration of open, ice‐free waters in the Central Arctic Ocean progressively increases, we suggest that enhanced light transmission could potentially expand the ecological niche of Pyramimonas spp. in the region.
- Published
- 2020
15. Dinoflagellates alter their carbon and nutrient metabolic strategies across environmental gradients in the central Pacific Ocean
- Author
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Natalie R, Cohen, Matthew R, McIlvin, Dawn M, Moran, Noelle A, Held, Jaclyn K, Saunders, Nicholas J, Hawco, Michael, Brosnahan, Giacomo R, DiTullio, Carl, Lamborg, John P, McCrow, Chris L, Dupont, Andrew E, Allen, and Mak A, Saito
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Pacific Ocean ,Dinoflagellida ,Protozoan Proteins ,Seawater ,Phylogeny ,Carbon Cycle - Abstract
Marine microeukaryotes play a fundamental role in biogeochemical cycling through the transfer of energy to higher trophic levels and vertical carbon transport. Despite their global importance, microeukaryote physiology, nutrient metabolism and contributions to carbon cycling across offshore ecosystems are poorly characterized. Here, we observed the prevalence of dinoflagellates along a 4,600-km meridional transect extending across the central Pacific Ocean, where oligotrophic gyres meet equatorial upwelling waters rich in macronutrients yet low in dissolved iron. A combined multi-omics and geochemical analysis provided a window into dinoflagellate metabolism across the transect, indicating a continuous taxonomic dinoflagellate community that shifted its functional transcriptome and proteome as it extended from the euphotic to the mesopelagic zone. In euphotic waters, multi-omics data suggested that a combination of trophic modes were utilized, while mesopelagic metabolism was marked by cytoskeletal investments and nutrient recycling. Rearrangement in nutrient metabolism was evident in response to variable nitrogen and iron regimes across the gradient, with no associated change in community assemblage. Total dinoflagellate proteins scaled with particulate carbon export, with both elevated in equatorial waters, suggesting a link between dinoflagellate abundance and total carbon flux. Dinoflagellates employ numerous metabolic strategies that enable broad occupation of central Pacific ecosystems and play a dual role in carbon transformation through both photosynthetic fixation in the euphotic zone and remineralization in the mesopelagic zone.
- Published
- 2019
16. Effect of flow rate and freezing on cyanocobalamin recovery using a commercial solid phase extraction cartridge
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Alison M. Bland, Peter A. Lee, Michael G. Janech, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Lauren E. Lees
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0303 health sciences ,Analyte ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Cold storage ,General Medicine ,Divinylbenzene ,01 natural sciences ,6. Clean water ,0104 chemical sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cartridge ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Seawater ,Solid phase extraction ,Vitamin B12 ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Analysis of vitamin B12 in sea water is laborious, time consuming, and often requires storage of relatively large-volume water samples. Alleviating these major limitations will increase the throughput of samples and, as a consequence, improve our understanding of the distribution and role of vitamin B12 in the oceans. Previous studies have indicated that target analyte recovery is negatively affected at flow rates exceeding 1 mL min−1 using home-made C18 Solid Phase Extraction (SPE) cartridges. In this study, the effect of flow rate on recovery of vitamin B12 was tested across a range of flow rates between 1 and 37 mL min−1 using a commercial SPE cartridge containing surface-modified styrene divinylbenzene. Recovery of vitamin B12 at flow rates up to the maximum rate tested did not statistically differ from 1 mL min 1. A second study was conducted to determine whether storage of the SPE cartridges at −20°C had a negative impact on vitamin B12 recovery. Recovery of vitamin B12 from SPE cartridges stored up to 13 days did not differ from unfrozen SPE cartridges. These data suggest that rapid extraction and cold storage of vitamin B12 on commercial SPE cartridges does not negatively affect recovery and offers an economical alternative to field studies.
- Published
- 2019
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17. Shaping of bacterial community composition and diversity by phytoplankton and salinity in the Delaware Estuary, USA
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, David L. Kirchman, and Matthew T. Cottrel
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0301 basic medicine ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Planctomycetes ,Bacteroidetes ,Estuary ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Salinity ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Oceanography ,Community composition ,Phytoplankton ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Diversity (politics) ,media_common - Published
- 2017
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18. Effect of flow rate and freezing on cyanocobalamin recovery using a commercial solid phase extraction cartridge
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Lauren, Lees, primary, Alison M, Bland, additional, Giacomo R, DiTullio, additional, Michael G, Janech, additional, and Peter A, Lee, additional
- Published
- 2020
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19. A seasonal study of dissolved cobalt in the Ross Sea, Antarctica: micronutrient behavior, absence of scavenging, and relationships with Zn, Cd, and P
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Tyler J. Goepfert, Mak A. Saito, Peter N. Sedwick, Abigail E. Noble, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Erin M. Bertrand
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,lcsh:Life ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Zinc ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Water column ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,Ecological stoichiometry ,Phytoplankton ,Photic zone ,14. Life underwater ,Scavenging ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Earth-Surface Processes ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,lcsh:QE1-996.5 ,Phosphate ,Subarctic climate ,lcsh:Geology ,lcsh:QH501-531 ,Oceanography ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,lcsh:Ecology - Abstract
We report the distribution of cobalt (Co) in the Ross Sea polynya during austral summer 2005–2006 and the following austral spring 2006. The vertical distribution of total dissolved Co (dCo) was similar to soluble reactive phosphate (PO43−), with dCo and PO43− showing a significant correlation throughout the water column (r2 = 0.87, 164 samples). A strong seasonal signal for dCo was observed, with most spring samples having concentrations ranging from ~45–85 pM, whereas summer dCo values were depleted below these levels by biological activity. Surface transect data from the summer cruise revealed concentrations at the low range of this seasonal variability (~30 pM dCo), with concentrations as low as 20 pM observed in some regions where PO43− was depleted to ~0.1 μM. Both complexed Co, defined as the fraction of dCo bound by strong organic ligands, and labile Co, defined as the fraction of dCo not bound by these ligands, were typically observed in significant concentrations throughout the water column. This contrasts the depletion of labile Co observed in the euphotic zone of other ocean regions, suggesting a much higher bioavailability for Co in the Ross Sea. An ecological stoichiometry of 37.6 μmol Co:mol−1 PO43− calculated from dissolved concentrations was similar to values observed in the subarctic Pacific, but approximately tenfold lower than values in the Eastern Tropical Pacific and Equatorial Atlantic. The ecological stoichiometries for dissolved Co and Zn suggest a greater overall use of Zn relative to Co in the shallow waters of the Ross Sea, with a Co:PO43−/Zn:PO43− ratio of 1:17. Comparison of these observed stoichiometries with values estimated in culture studies suggests that Zn is a key micronutrient that likely influences phytoplankton diversity in the Ross Sea. In contrast, the observed ecological stoichiometries for Co were below values necessary for the growth of eukaryotic phytoplankton in laboratory culture experiments conducted in the absence of added zinc, implying the need for significant Zn nutrition in the Zn-Co cambialistic enzymes. The lack of an obvious kink in the dissolved Co:PO43− relationship was in contrast to Zn:PO43− and Cd:PO43− kinks previously observed in the Ross Sea. An excess uptake mechanism for kink formation is proposed as a major driver of Cd:PO43− kinks, where Zn and Cd uptake in excess of that needed for optimal growth occurs at the base of the euphotic zone, and no clear Co kink occurs because its abundances are too low for excess uptake. An unusual characteristic of Co geochemistry in the Ross Sea is an apparent lack of Co scavenging processes, as inferred from the absence of dCo removal below the euphotic zone. We hypothesize that this vertical distribution reflects a low rate of Co scavenging by Mn oxidizing bacteria, perhaps due to Mn scarcity, relative to the timescale of the annual deep winter mixing in the Ross Sea. Thus Co exhibits nutrient-like behavior in the Ross Sea, in contrast to its hybrid-type behavior in other ocean regions, with implications for the possibility of increased marine Co inventories and utility as a paleooceanographic proxy.
- Published
- 2018
20. Incorporation of 14CO2 into Protein as an Estimate of Phytoplankton N-Assimilation and Relative Growth Rate
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Giacomo R. DiTullio
- Subjects
Relative growth rate ,Phytoplankton ,Environmental science ,Assimilation (biology) ,Atmospheric sciences - Published
- 2018
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21. The multiple fates of sinking particles in the North Atlantic Ocean
- Author
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, Kimberlee Thamatrakoln, James R. Collins, Scott C. Doney, Justin E. Ossolinski, Bethanie R. Edwards, Benjamin A. S. Van Mooy, and Kay D. Bidle
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Atmospheric Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,Remineralisation ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Mesopelagic zone ,Biology ,Sink (geography) ,Carbon cycle ,Water column ,chemistry ,Settling ,Environmental chemistry ,Respiration ,Environmental Chemistry ,Organic matter ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
The direct respiration of sinking organic matter by attached bacteria is often invoked as the dominant sink for settling particles in the mesopelagic ocean. However, other processes, such as enzymatic solubilization and mechanical disaggregation, also contribute to particle flux attenuation by transferring organic matter to the water column. Here we use observations from the North Atlantic Ocean, coupled to sensitivity analyses of a simple model, to assess the relative importance of particle-attached microbial respiration compared to the other processes that can degrade sinking particles. The observed carbon fluxes, bacterial production rates, and respiration by water column and particle-attached microbial communities each spanned more than an order of magnitude. Rates of substrate-specific respiration on sinking particle material ranged from 0.007 ± 0.003 to 0.173 ± 0.105 day−1. A comparison of these substrate-specific respiration rates with model results suggested sinking particle material was transferred to the water column by various biological and mechanical processes nearly 3.5 times as fast as it was directly respired. This finding, coupled with strong metabolic demand imposed by measurements of water column respiration (729.3 ± 266.0 mg C m−2 d−1, on average, over the 50 to 150 m depth interval), suggested a large fraction of the organic matter evolved from sinking particles ultimately met its fate through subsequent remineralization in the water column. At three sites, we also measured very low bacterial growth efficiencies and large discrepancies between depth-integrated mesopelagic respiration and carbon inputs.
- Published
- 2015
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22. Effects of nitrogen and dissolved organic carbon on microplankton abundances in four coastal South Carolina (USA) systems
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Michelle Reed, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Dianne I. Greenfield, and Suzanne E. Kacenas
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South carolina ,Oceanography ,chemistry ,Dissolved organic carbon ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Environmental science ,Aquatic Science ,Nitrogen ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2015
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23. Iron triggers colony formation in Phaeocystis antarctica: connecting molecular mechanisms with iron biogeochemistry
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Hong Zheng, Andrew E. Allen, Dawn M. Moran, John P. McCrow, Jonathan H. Badger, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Mak A. Saito, Matthew R. McIlvin, and Sara J. Bender
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0301 basic medicine ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,biology ,Chemistry ,Biogeochemistry ,Chaetoceros ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Multicellular organism ,030104 developmental biology ,Diatom ,Biochemistry ,Proteome ,Flagellate ,Bloom ,Plastocyanin ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Phaeocystis antarctica is an important phytoplankter of the Ross Sea where it dominates the early season bloom after sea ice retreat and is a major contributor to carbon export. The factors that influence Phaeocystis colony formation and the resultant Ross Sea bloom initiation have been of great scientific interest, yet there is little known about the underlying mechanisms responsible for these phenomena. Here, we present laboratory and field studies on Phaeocystis antarctica grown under multiple iron conditions using a coupled proteomic and transcriptomic approach. P. antarctica had a lower iron limitation threshold than a Ross Sea diatom Chaetoceros sp., and at increased iron nutrition (> 120 pM Fe') a shift from flagellate cells to a majority of colonial cells in P. antarctica was observed, implying a role for iron as a trigger for colony formation. Proteome analysis revealed an extensive and coordinated shift in proteome structure linked to iron availability and life cycle transitions with 327 and 436 proteins significantly different between low and high iron in strains 1871 and 1374, respectively. The enzymes flavodoxin and plastocyanin that can functionally replace iron metalloenzymes were observed at low iron treatments consistent with cellular iron sparing strategies, with plastocyanin being more dynamic in range. The numerous isoforms of the putative iron-starvation induced protein ISIP group (ISIP2A and ISIP3) had abundance patterns coincided with that of either low or high iron (and coincident flagellate or the colonial cell types in strain 1871), implying that there may be specific iron acquisition systems for each life cycle type. The proteome analysis also revealed numerous structural proteins associated with each cell type: within flagellate cells actin and tubulin from flagella and haptonema structures as well as a suite of calcium-binding proteins with EF domains were observed. In the colony-dominated samples a variety of structural proteins were observed that are also often found in multicellular organisms including spondins, lectins, fibrillins, and glycoproteins with von Willebrand domains. A large number of proteins of unknown function were identified that became abundant at either high and low iron availability. These results were compared to the first metaproteomic analysis of a Ross Sea Phaeocystis bloom to connect the mechanistic information to the in situ ecology and biogeochemistry. Proteins associated with both flagellate and colonial cells were observed in the bloom sample consistent with the need for both cell types within a growing bloom. Bacterial iron storage and B12 biosynthesis proteins were also observed consistent with chemical synergies within the colony microbiome to cope with the biogeochemical conditions. Together these responses reveal a complex, highly coordinated effort by P. antarctica to regulate its phenotype at the molecular level in response to iron and provide a window into the biology, ecology, and biogeochemistry of this group.
- Published
- 2018
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24. Supplementary material to 'Iron triggers colony formation in Phaeocystis antarctica: connecting molecular mechanisms with iron biogeochemistry'
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Sara J. Bender, Dawn M. Moran, Matthew R. McIlvin, Hong Zheng, John P. McCrow, Jonathan Badger, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Andrew E. Allen, and Mak A. Saito
- Published
- 2018
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25. Coccolithovirus facilitation of carbon export in the North Atlantic
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Jozef I. Nissimov, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Robert J. Chant, Miguel J. Frada, Helen F. Fredricks, Ana Martins, Marco J. L. Coolen, Jonathan E. Hunter, Christopher M. Brown, James R. Collins, Liti Haramaty, Kay D. Bidle, Assaf Vardi, Benjamin A. S. Van Mooy, Christien P. Laber, Emmanuel Boss, Uri Sheyn, Brittany M. Schieler, Kuldeep D. More, Yoav Lehahn, Justin E. Ossolinski, Rebecca Vandzura, Kimberlee Thamatrakoln, Elias Hunter, and Filipa Carvalho
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Satellite Imagery ,Coccolithovirus ,Food Chain ,Oceans and Seas ,Immunology ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Deep sea ,Carbon cycle ,Carbon Cycle ,03 medical and health sciences ,Total inorganic carbon ,Phytoplankton ,Genetics ,Phycodnaviridae ,Seawater ,Emiliania huxleyi ,Total organic carbon ,biology ,fungi ,Biological pump ,Haptophyta ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Carbon ,030104 developmental biology ,Oceanography ,Remote Sensing Technology ,Environmental science - Abstract
Marine phytoplankton account for approximately half of global primary productivity 1 , making their fate an important driver of the marine carbon cycle. Viruses are thought to recycle more than one-quarter of oceanic photosynthetically fixed organic carbon 2 , which can stimulate nutrient regeneration, primary production and upper ocean respiration 2 via lytic infection and the ‘virus shunt’. Ultimately, this limits the trophic transfer of carbon and energy to both higher food webs and the deep ocean 2 . Using imagery taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) onboard the Aqua satellite, along with a suite of diagnostic lipid- and gene-based molecular biomarkers, in situ optical sensors and sediment traps, we show that Coccolithovirus infections of mesoscale (~100 km) Emiliania huxleyi blooms in the North Atlantic are coupled with particle aggregation, high zooplankton grazing and greater downward vertical fluxes of both particulate organic and particulate inorganic carbon from the upper mixed layer. Our analyses captured blooms in different phases of infection (early, late and post) and revealed the highest export flux in ‘early-infected blooms’ with sinking particles being disproportionately enriched with infected cells and subsequently remineralized at depth in the mesopelagic. Our findings reveal viral infection as a previously unrecognized ecosystem process enhancing biological pump efficiency.
- Published
- 2017
26. In situ determination of cellular DMSP and pigment quotas in a Prorocentrum minimum bloom near the Falkland Islands
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Erin O’Reilly, Tyler Cyronak, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Peter A. Lee
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Biogeochemical cycle ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,Population ,Sorting (sediment) ,fungi ,Dinoflagellate ,Biogeochemistry ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,biology.organism_classification ,Dimethylsulfoniopropionate ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,Phytoplankton ,lcsh:Ecology ,Bloom ,education ,dimethylsulfoniopropionate, Patagonian shelf, dinoflagellate, pigments, sorting flow cytometer - Abstract
Marine phytoplankton play critical roles in the biogeochemistry of open and coastal oceans. However, the impact that individual species have on an ecosystem-wide scale can strongly depend on the production of cellular compounds, especially those that are climatically active such as dimethylsulfide (DMS). Herein, we use sorting flow cytometry to separate a distinct phytoplankton population from four samples taken along the Patagonian shelf near the Falkland Islands. Morphological, genetic, and biochemical analyses demonstrated that three of the sorted samples were dominated by a bloom of the dinoflagellate Prorocentrum minimum. Cellular quotas of the DMS-precursor dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) ranged from 1.23–4.11 pg cell−1 in the same population at different sampling stations. Causes of this variability may be due to different growth stages of the P. minimum bloom or changes in other environmental variables. Overall, in situ intracellular DMSP concentrations were lower than what would be expected based on previous, culture-based measurements. We demonstrate the difficulties inherent in sorting individual phytoplankton species from natural samples in order to determine in situ species-specific cellular quotas of important biogeochemical compounds.
- Published
- 2014
27. Multiple nutrient stresses at intersecting Pacific Ocean biomes detected by protein biomarkers
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Dawn M. Moran, Anton F. Post, Tyler J. Goepfert, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Carl H. Lamborg, Matthew R. McIlvin, and Mak A. Saito
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geography ,Multidisciplinary ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Biome ,Subtropics ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Phosphorus metabolism ,Nutrient ,Ocean gyre ,Prochlorococcus ,Transect ,Nitrogen cycle - Abstract
Protein markers of cyanobacterial stress Nutrients including iron, nitrogen, and phosphorus limit primary productivity in the oceans. Determining how abundant cyanobacteria such as Prochlorococcus adapt to nutrient stress across marine settings requires accurate molecular assays. Saito et al. developed a proteomic and metaproteomic approach capable of targeting specific metabolic biomarkers from mixed communities in seawater (see the Perspective by Moore). Prochlorococcus proteins are indicative of a major limiting nutrient across a wide transect in the Pacific Ocean; however, they also show that the limitation of multiple nutrients at overlapping biomes is an additional source of stress. Science, this issue p. 1173 ; see also p. 1120
- Published
- 2014
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28. Decoupling Physical from Biological Processes to Assess the Impact of Viruses on a Mesoscale Algal Bloom
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Christian Laber, Benjamin A. S. Van Mooy, Yinon Rudich, Emmanuel Boss, Marco J. L. Coolen, Kay D. Bidle, Yoav Lehahn, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Shlomit Sharoni, Ana Martins, Uri Sheyn, Daniella Schatz, Assaf Vardi, Miri Trainic, Miguel J. Frada, Ilan Koren, and Shai Efrati
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Coccolithophore ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Deep sea ,Algal bloom ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phytoplankton ,Water Movements ,14. Life underwater ,Atlantic Ocean ,030304 developmental biology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,0303 health sciences ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences(all) ,Ecology ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all) ,fungi ,Biological pump ,Haptophyta ,Eutrophication ,biology.organism_classification ,Oceanography ,13. Climate action ,Ocean color ,Remote Sensing Technology ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Bloom ,Virus Physiological Phenomena - Abstract
SummaryPhytoplankton blooms are ephemeral events of exceptionally high primary productivity that regulate the flux of carbon across marine food webs [1–3]. Quantification of bloom turnover [4] is limited by a fundamental difficulty to decouple between physical and biological processes as observed by ocean color satellite data. This limitation hinders the quantification of bloom demise and its regulation by biological processes [5, 6], which has important consequences on the efficiency of the biological pump of carbon to the deep ocean [7–9].Here, we address this challenge and quantify algal blooms’ turnover using a combination of satellite and in situ data, which allows identification of a relatively stable oceanic patch that is subject to little mixing with its surroundings. Using a newly developed multisatellite Lagrangian diagnostic, we decouple the contributions of physical and biological processes, allowing quantification of a complete life cycle of a mesoscale (∼10–100 km) bloom of coccolithophores in the North Atlantic, from exponential growth to its rapid demise. We estimate the amount of organic carbon produced during the bloom to be in the order of 24,000 tons, of which two-thirds were turned over within 1 week. Complimentary in situ measurements of the same patch area revealed high levels of specific viruses infecting coccolithophore cells, therefore pointing at the importance of viral infection as a possible mortality agent. Application of the newly developed satellite-based approaches opens the way for large-scale quantification of the impact of diverse environmental stresses on the fate of phytoplankton blooms and derived carbon in the ocean.
- Published
- 2014
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29. In situdetermination of cellular DMSP and pigment quotas in aProrocentrum minimumbloom near the Falkland Islands
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Tyler Cyronak, Erin O’Reilly, Peter A. Lee, and Giacomo R. DiTullio
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Aquatic Science ,Oceanography - Published
- 2014
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30. Phaeocystis antarctica unusual summer bloom in stratified antarctic coastal waters (Terra Nova Bay, Ross Sea)
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Olga Mangoni, Maria Saggiomo, Paolo Povero, Vincenzo Saggiomo, Francesco Bolinesi, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Michela Castellano, Mangoni, O., Saggiomo, M., Bolinesi, F., Castellano, M., Povero, P., Saggiomo, V., and Ditullio, G. R.
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0106 biological sciences ,Antarctic Regions ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Algal bloom ,Biomarker pigment ,Phytoplankton ,Climate change ,Dominance (ecology) ,Photic zone ,14. Life underwater ,biology ,Biomarker pigments, Climate change, Phytoplankton ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Haptophyta ,General Medicine ,Eutrophication ,Plankton ,biology.organism_classification ,Pollution ,Diatom ,Bays ,Environmental science ,Seasons ,Biomarker pigments ,Bloom ,Bay - Abstract
This study focuses on the potential explanations for a Phaeocystis antarctica summer bloom occurred in stratified waters of Terra Nova Bay (TNB) - which is part of the Antarctic Special Protected Area (n.161) in the Ross Sea - trough a multi-parameter correlative approach. Many previous studies have highlighted that water column stratification typically favors diatom dominance compared to the colonial haptophyte P. antarctica, in the Ross Sea, and this correlation has often been used to explain the historic dominance of diatoms in TNB. To explore the spatial and temporal progression of P. antarctica bloom in coastal waters, four stations were sampled three times each between December 31, 2009 and January 13, 2010. Taxonomic and pigment composition of phytoplankton communities, macro-nutrient concentrations and various different indices, all indicated the relative dominance of P. antarctica. Cell abundances revealed that P. antarctica contributed 79% of total cell counts in the upper 25 m and 93% in the lower photic zone. Similarly, a strong correlation was observed between Chl-a and the Hex:Fuco pigment ratio, corroborating the microscopic analyses. Recent studies have shown that iron can trigger colonial P. antarctica blooms. Based on the Hex:Chl-c3 proxy for iron limitation in P. antarctica, we hypothesize that anomalously higher iron fluxes were responsible for the unusual bloom of colonial P. antarctica observed in TNB.
- Published
- 2019
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31. Novel molecular determinants of viral susceptibility and resistance in the lipidome ofEmiliania huxleyi
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, James M. Fulton, Assaf Vardi, Helen F. Fredricks, Benjamin A. S. Van Mooy, B. Jacob Kendrick, and Kay D. Bidle
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education.field_of_study ,biology ,fungi ,Population ,Lipidome ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Virus ,Sialic acid ,Haptophyte ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Viral envelope ,chemistry ,Algae ,Botany ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Emiliania huxleyi - Abstract
Summary Viruses play a key role in controlling the population dynamics of algae, including Emiliania huxleyi, a globally distributed haptophyte with calcite coccoliths that comprise ca. 50% of the sinking carbonate flux from the surface ocean. Emiliania huxleyi viruses (EhVs) routinely infect and terminate E. huxleyi blooms. EhVs are surrounded by a lipid envelope, which we found to be comprised largely of glycosphingolipids (GSLs) with lesser amounts of polar glycerolipids. Infection appears to involve membrane fusion between the virus and host, and we hypothesized that specific polar lipids may facilitate virus attachment. We identified three novel intact polar lipids in E. huxleyi strain CCMP 374 and EhV86, including a GSL with a monosaccharide sialic acid headgroup (sGSL); for all 11 E. huxleyi strains we tested, there was a direct relationship between sGSL content and sensitivity to infection by EhV1, EhV86 and EhV163. In mesocosms, the E. huxleyi population with greatest initial sGSL content had the highest rate of virus-induced mortality. We propose potential physiological roles for sGSL that would be beneficial for growth but leave cells susceptible to infection, thus furthering the discussion of Red Queen-based co-evolution and the cost(s) of sensitivity and resistance in the dynamic E. huxleyi-EhV system.
- Published
- 2014
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32. Spatial and temporal variations in variable fluoresence in the Ross Sea (Antarctica): Oceanographic correlates and bloom dynamics
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Robert B. Dunbar, Zbigniew Kolber, Walker O. Smith, Peter N. Sedwick, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Jill A. Peloquin, David A. Hutchins, Sasha Tozzi, and Matthew C. Long
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Water mass ,Chlorophyll a ,fungi ,Aquatic Science ,Spring bloom ,Biogenic silica ,Oceanography ,Photosynthetic capacity ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Geography ,chemistry ,Phytoplankton ,Dominance (ecology) ,Photic zone - Abstract
During two cruises to the Ross Sea, Antarctica in austral spring and summer, fast repetition rate fluorometry was used to investigate the relationship between phytoplankton photophysiology and water mass characteristics, micronutrient availability, and composition. Particulate organic matter proxies for phytoplankton biomass (chlorophyll a, particulate organic carbon and nitrogen, and biogenic silica) were all elevated in the photic zone during spring and summer. Biogenic silica concentrations were an order of magnitude higher in summer relative to spring, reflecting a shift in composition from Phaoecystis antarctica to diatoms. Quantum yields of PS II (Fv/Fm) were generally higher in spring relative to summer, coincident with weaker vertical and horizontal gradients in hydrographic properties. Reduced Fv/Fm values (
- Published
- 2013
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33. Identification of isethionic acid and other small molecule metabolites of Fragilariopsis cylindrus with nuclear magnetic resonance
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Daniel W. Bearden, Peter A. Lee, Sarah B. Vied, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Michael G. Janech, and Arezue F. B. Boroujerdi
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Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Proline ,Metabolite ,Sulfonium Compounds ,Isethionic Acid ,Dimethylsulfoniopropionate ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Metabolomics ,Betaine ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Cylindrus ,Picolinic Acids ,Diatoms ,Principal Component Analysis ,biology ,Isethionic acid ,Cold Climate ,biology.organism_classification ,Culture Media ,chemistry ,Metabolome ,Osmoprotectant - Abstract
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has been used to obtain metabolic profiles of the polar diatom Fragilariopsis cylindrus, leading to the identification of a novel metabolite in this organism. Initial results from an ongoing metabolomics study have led to the discovery of isethionic acid (2-hydroxyethanesulfonic acid, CAS: 107-36-8) as a major metabolite in F. cylindrus. This compound is being produced by the organism under normal culture conditions. This finding is the first report of a diatom producing isethionic acid. In addition to isethionic acid, four other metabolites, dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), betaine, homarine, and proline were present and may serve as osmoprotectants in F. cylindrus. NMR-based metabolite profiles of F. cylindrus were obtained along a growth curve of the organism. The relative concentration levels of the five metabolites were monitored over a growth period of F. cylindrus from 18 to 25 days. All showed an increase in relative concentration with time, except for proline, which began to decrease after day 21.
- Published
- 2012
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34. Basin-scale inputs of cobalt, iron, and manganese from the Benguela-Angola front to the South Atlantic Ocean
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Tyler J. Goepfert, Daniel C. Ohnemus, Abigail E. Noble, Carl H. Lamborg, Mak A. Saito, Joe C. Jennings, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Christopher I. Measures, Karen L. Casciotti, Caitlin H. Frame, and Phoebe J. Lam
- Subjects
geography ,Water mass ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Oxygen minimum zone ,Plume ,chemistry ,Ocean gyre ,Environmental science ,Upwelling ,Trace metal ,Scavenging ,Cobalt - Abstract
We present full-depth zonal sections of total dissolved cobalt, iron, manganese, and labile cobalt from the South Atlantic Ocean. A basin-scale plume from the African coast appeared to be a major source of dissolved metals to this region, with high cobalt concentrations in the oxygen minimum zone of the Angola Dome and extending 2500 km into the subtropical gyre. Metal concentrations were elevated along the coastal shelf, likely due to reductive dissolution and resuspension of particulate matter. Linear relationships between cobalt, N2O, and O2, as well as low surface aluminum supported a coastal rather than atmospheric cobalt source. Lateral advection coupled with upwelling, biological uptake, and remineralization delivered these metals to the basin, as evident in two zonal transects with distinct physical processes that exhibited different metal distributions. Scavenging rates within the coastal plume differed for the three metals; iron was removed fastest, manganese removal was 2.5 times slower, and cobalt scavenging could not be discerned from water mass mixing. Because scavenging, biological utilization, and export constantly deplete the oceanic inventories of these three hybrid-type metals, point sources of the scale observed here likely serve as vital drivers of their oceanic cycles. Manganese concentrations were elevated in surface waters across the basin, likely due to coupled redox processes acting to concentrate the dissolved species there. These observations of basin-scale hybrid metal plumes combined with the recent projections of expanding oxygen minimum zones suggest a potential mechanism for effects on ocean primary production and nitrogen fixation via increases in trace metal source inputs.
- Published
- 2012
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35. Effects of increased temperature on dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) concentration and methionine synthase activity in Symbiodinium microadriaticum
- Author
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Amanda L. McLenon and Giacomo R. DiTullio
- Subjects
Methionine ,biology ,Dinoflagellate ,biology.organism_classification ,Dimethylsulfoniopropionate ,De novo synthesis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Symbiodinium ,chemistry ,Algae ,Biochemistry ,Botany ,biology.protein ,Environmental Chemistry ,Methionine synthase ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology ,Methionine synthase activity - Abstract
Dinoflagellate algae of the genus Symbiodinium occur as endosymbionts in a variety of hosts including coral. The response of Symbiodinium spp. to environmental changes could dictate survival of their hosts and the ecological success of coral reef ecosystems. Oxidative stress has been linked to a breakdown in this symbiotic relationship, known as bleaching. Increased temperature is one of the primary environmental changes linked to this phenomenon. Preliminary studies have established high concentrations of the sulfur compound dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) in Symbiodinium spp., with increased temperature. To examine the potential use of DMSP as an antioxidant, a 5 day incubation experiment was conducted at two temperatures with the algae S. microadriaticum (CCMP1633) isolated from the cnidarian host Aiptasia pulchella. An HPLC assay for the activity of the enzyme B12-dependent methionine synthase was modified and used to determine the link between de novo production of methionine, a precursor to DMSP, and temperature induced oxidative stress. DMSP concentrations per cell increased approximately 38 % in the 33 °C treatment cultures over 120 h. However, these cells also increased more than 2-fold in biovolume (127 ± 43 %), and SYTO-BC stain indicated increased DNA content (approximately 4-fold), suggesting arrested cell division. Normalization of DMSP to biovolume revealed that the concentrations actually decreased approximately 49 % after 2 days in cultures exposed to elevated temperature (33 °C), but were not significantly different from the control treatment at 120 h (27 °C). Concomitant changes in the 33 °C treatment relative to the control (after 120 h) resulted in an approximately 8-fold increase in reactive oxygen species, a 37 % (±7 %) decrease in photosynthetic efficiency of photosystem II, and a 5-fold increase in xanthophyll cycling. Methionine synthase activity (MSA) correlated to the decrease in DMSP concentration (R 2 = 0.778), with decreasing activity at the high temperature. Given this decrease in MSA, the increase in DMSP per cell may be due to DMSP production utilizing methionine from protein turnover, and not de novo synthesis via MSA. The findings of this study provide insight into the responses of algal symbionts to environmental changes, shed light on the potential use of DMSP and other known photo-protective mechanisms such as xanthophyll cycling under temperature induced oxidative stress, and support the suspected cessation of cell division under these conditions. This information could be crucial to understanding cellular responses to environmental changes and the ability of these organisms to survive under elevated sea surface temperatures projected for the near future.
- Published
- 2012
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36. Proteomic Analysis of a Sea-Ice Diatom: Salinity Acclimation Provides New Insight into the Dimethylsulfoniopropionate Production Pathway
- Author
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Peter A. Lee, Jennifer M. Bennett, Barbara R. Lyon, Michael G. Janech, and Giacomo R. DiTullio
- Subjects
Proteomics ,S-Adenosylmethionine ,Salinity ,Physiology ,Acclimatization ,Sulfonium Compounds ,Environmental Stress and Adaptation to Stress ,Plant Science ,Dimethylsulfoniopropionate ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Methionine ,Biosynthesis ,Genetics ,Protein Isoforms ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional ,Ice Cover ,Photosynthesis ,Axenic ,Diatoms ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Adenosylhomocysteinase ,Photosystem II Protein Complex ,Proteins ,Methionine Adenosyltransferase ,Methyltransferases ,biology.organism_classification ,Amino acid ,Enzyme ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Phytoplankton - Abstract
Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) plays important roles in oceanic carbon and sulfur cycling and may significantly impact climate. It is a biomolecule synthesized from the methionine (Met) pathway and proposed to serve various physiological functions to aid in environmental stress adaptation through its compatible solute, cryoprotectant, and antioxidant properties. Yet, the enzymes and mechanisms regulating DMSP production are poorly understood. This study utilized a proteomics approach to investigate protein changes associated with salinity-induced DMSP increases in the model sea-ice diatom Fragilariopsis cylindrus (CCMP 1102). We hypothesized proteins associated with the Met-DMSP biosynthesis pathway would increase in relative abundance when challenged with elevated salinity. To test this hypothesis axenic log-phase cultures initially grown at a salinity of 35 were gradually shifted to a final salinity of 70 over a 24-h period. Intracellular DMSP was measured and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis was used to identify protein changes at 48 h after the shift. Intracellular DMSP increased by approximately 85% in the hypersaline cultures. One-third of the proteins increased under high salinity were associated with amino acid pathways. Three protein isoforms of S-adenosylhomo-cysteine hydrolase, which synthesizes a Met precursor, increased 1.8- to 2.1-fold, two isoforms of S-adenosyl Met synthetase increased 1.9- to 2.5-fold, and S-adenosyl Met methyltransferase increased by 2.8-fold, suggesting active methyl cycle proteins are recruited in the synthesis of DMSP. Proteins from the four enzyme classes of the proposed algal Met transaminase DMSP pathway were among the elevated proteins, supporting our hypothesis and providing candidate genes for future characterization studies.
- Published
- 2011
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37. Potential impact of increased temperature and CO2on particulate dimethylsulfoniopropionate in the Southeastern Bering Sea
- Author
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Peter A. Lee, Sarah F. Riseman, Clinton E. Hare, David A. Hutchins, Karine Leblanc, and Giacomo R. DiTullio
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Aquatic Science ,Oceanography - Published
- 2011
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38. Spatial variability and temporal dynamics of surface water pCO2, ΔO2/Ar and dimethylsulfide in the Ross Sea, Antarctica
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, Philippe D. Tortell, Matthew C. Long, Céline Guéguen, Christopher D. Payne, and Peter A. Lee
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Chlorophyll a ,Mixed layer ,Stratification (water) ,Aquatic Science ,Spring bloom ,Oceanography ,Algal bloom ,Sea surface temperature ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Phytoplankton ,Environmental science ,Spatial variability - Abstract
We report results from two surveys of pCO2, biological O2 saturation (DO2/Ar) and dimethylsulfide (DMS) in surface waters of the Ross Sea polynya. Measurements were made during early spring (November 2006–December 2006) and mid-summer (December 2005–January 2006) using ship-board membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS) for high spatial resolution (i.e. sub-km) analysis. During the early spring survey, the polynya was in the initial stages of development and exhibited a rapid increase in open water area and phytoplankton biomass over the course of our � 3 week occupation. We observed a rapid transition from a net heterotrophic ice-covered system (supersaturated pCO2 and undersaturated O2) to a high productivity regime associated with a Phaeocystis-dominated phytoplankton bloom. The timing of the early spring phytoplankton bloom was closely tied to increasing sea surface temperature across the polynya, as well as reduced wind speeds and ice cover, leading to enhanced vertical stratification. There was a strong correlation between pCO2, DO2/Ar, DMS and chlorophyll a (Chl a) during the spring phytoplankton bloom, indicating a strong biological imprint on gas distributions. Box model calculations suggest that pCO2 drawdown was largely attributable to net community production, while gas exchange and shoaling mixed layers also exerted a strong control on the re-equilibration of mixed layer O2 with the overlying atmosphere. DMS concentrations were closely coupled to Phaeocystis biomass across the early spring polynya, with maximum concentrations exceeding 100 nM. During the summer cruise, we sampled a large net autotrophic polynya, shortly after the seasonal peak in phytoplankton productivity. Both diatoms and Phaeocystis were abundant in the phytoplankton assemblages during this time. Minimum pCO2 was less than 100 ppm, while DO2/Ar exceeded 30% in some regions. Mean DMS concentrations were � 2-fold lower than during the spring, although the range of concentrations was similar between the two surveys. There was a significant correlation between pCO2, DO2/Ar and Chl a across the summer polynya, but the strength of these correlations and the slope of O2 vs. CO2 relationship were significantly lower than during the early spring. Summertime DMS concentrations were not significantly correlated to phytoplankton biomass (Chl a), pCO2 or DO2/Ar. In contrast to the early spring time, there were no clear temporal trends in summertime gas concentrations. Rather, small-scale spatial variability, likely resulting from mixing and localized sea-ice melt, was clearly evident in surface gas distributions across the polynya. Analysis of length-scale dependent variability demonstrated that much of the spatial variance in surface water gases occurred at scales of o20 km, suggesting that high resolution analysis is needed to fully capture biogeochemical heterogeneity in this system.
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- 2011
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39. A shipboard natural community continuous culture system for ecologically relevant low-level nutrient enrichment experiments
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David A. Hutchins, Frances Pustizzi, Clinton E. Hare, and Giacomo R. DiTullio
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Ocean Engineering - Published
- 2011
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40. Influence of irradiance and iron on the growth of colonial Phaeocystis antarctica: implications for seasonal bloom dynamics in the Ross Sea, Antarctica
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, Peter N. Sedwick, and Nathan S. Garcia
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Growth medium ,biology ,Chemistry ,Irradiance ,Aquatic Science ,Seasonality ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oceanography ,Algae ,Environmental chemistry ,medicine ,Seawater ,Water quality ,Growth rate ,Bloom ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Laboratory culture experiments were used to investigate the growth rate of colonial Phaeocystis antarctica as a function of irradiance and dissolved iron concentration. The experiments were conducted with a P. antarctica strain isolated from the southern Ross Sea, Antarctica, and made use of natural, low-iron (
- Published
- 2009
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41. Factors determining the vertical profile of dimethylsulfide in the Sargasso Sea during summer
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Roger Allan Cropp, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Patricia A. Matrai, Dierdre A. Toole, D.A. delValle, John W. H. Dacey, Albert Jerome Gabric, Raymond G. Najjar, Ronald P. Kiene, Rafel Simó, and Doris Slezak
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Mixed layer ,DMS ,Mesoscale meteorology ,Plankton ,Oceanography ,Dimethylsulfoniopropionate ,Picophytoplankton ,Modelling ,Food web ,Atmosphere ,Oceanic eddies ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dimethylsulfide ,chemistry ,Phytoplankton ,Environmental science ,Dimethyl sulfide ,DMSP - Abstract
14 pages,11 figures The major source of reduced sulfur in the remote marine atmosphere is the biogenic compound dimethylsulfide (DMS), which is ubiquitous in the world’s oceans and released through food web interactions. Relevant fluxes and concentrations of DMS, its phytoplankton-produced precursor, dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) and related parameters were measured during an intensive Lagrangian field study in two mesoscale eddies in the Sargasso Sea during July–August 2004, a period characterized by high mixed-layer DMS and low chlorophyll—the so-called ‘DMS summer paradox’. We used a 1-D vertically variable DMS production model forced with output from a 1-D vertical mixing model to evaluate the extent to which the simulated vertical structure in DMS and DMSP was consistent with changes expected from field-determined rate measurements of individual processes, such as photolysis, microbial DMS and dissolved DMSP turnover, and air–sea gas exchange. Model numerical experiments and related parametric sensitivity analyses suggested that the vertical structure of the DMS profile in the upper 60 m was determined mainly by the interplay of the two depth variable processes—vertical mixing and photolysis—and less by biological consumption of DMS. A key finding from the model calibration was the need to increase the DMS(P) algal exudation rate constant, which includes the effects of cell rupture due to grazing and cell lysis, to significantly higher values than previously used in other regions. This was consistent with the small algal cell size and therefore high surface area-to-volume ratio of the dominant DMSP-producing group—the picoeukaryotes. We gratefully acknowledge the financial assistance provided through NSF Biocomplexity funding (OPP-0083078) and an Australian Research Council Discovery Grant. We are grateful to the comments by D.J. Kieber. We recognize the participation and help of K. Bailey, J. Bisgrove, B. Blomquist, I. Forn, H. Harada, B. Huebert, D. Jones, L. Maroney, A. Neely, S. Riseman, C. Smith, J. Stefels, K. Tinklepaugh, M. Vila-Costa, G. Westby, H. Zemmelink and the R/V Seward Johnson crew. DiTullio et al., 2001; Simo ́ and Dachs, 2002; Simon and Azam, 1989; Zemmelink et al., 2005
- Published
- 2008
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42. Carbon cycling by microbes influenced by light in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean
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Nina Nemcek, Matthew T. Cottrell, David L. Kirchman, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Vanessa K. Michelou
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Biomass (ecology) ,Phytoplankton ,Botany ,Autotroph ,Prochlorococcus ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Bacterial growth ,Spring bloom ,Plankton ,biology.organism_classification ,Photoheterotroph ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The goal of this study was to examine the relationships between phytoplankton and heterotrophic bacteria and the effect of light on bacterial growth and respiration in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean in summer. Heterotrophic microbes were a substantial component of the plankton as indicated by the ratio of bacterial biomass to phytoplankton biomass, which varied from 0.15 to 0.83, averaging 0.60. Aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic (AAP) bacteria made up on average 10% of bacterial abundance and 13 % of bacterial biomass. AAP bacterial biomass was on average 2-fold higher than Synechococcus sp. biomass, whereas Prochlorococcus sp. was never more than 1 % of bacterial biomass. The bacterial production to primary production ratio ranged from 0.04 to 0.14 and was on average 0.07. The bacterial growth efficiency (BGE) in light incubations (10%) was 3-fold lower than in the dark (32 %). Consequently, the calculated flux of carbon through bacteria in the light was also about 3-fold lower in the dark, since ratios of bacterial carbon demand (BCD) to primary production inferred from light and dark estimates of BGE were 0.7 and 0.2, respectively. However, BCD and respiration rates were not greater than primary production, suggesting that this region of the North Atlantic was net autotrophic even after the spring bloom. The BGE data and the abundance of photoheterotrophic microbes, such as AAP bacteria, highlight the importance of the effects of light on carbon cycling by bacteria in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean.
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- 2008
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43. Vitamin B12 and iron colimitation of phytoplankton growth in the Ross Sea
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, Mak A. Saito, Christina R. Riesselman, Julie M. Rose, Abigail E. Noble, Erin M. Bertrand, Maeve C. Lohan, and Peter A. Lee
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Vitamin ,Chlorophyll a ,Biomass (ecology) ,biology ,fungi ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Diatom ,Water column ,Algae ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Botany ,Phytoplankton ,polycyclic compounds ,Incubation - Abstract
Primary production in the Ross Sea, one of the most productive areas in the Southern Ocean, has previously been shown to be seasonally limited by iron. In two of three bottle incubation experiments conducted in the austral summer, significantly higher chlorophyll a (Chl a) concentrations were measured upon the addition of iron and B12, relative to iron additions alone. Initial bacterial abundances were significantly lower in the two experiments that showed phytoplankton stimulation upon addition of B12 and iron relative to the experiment that did not show this stimulation. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the bacteria and archaea in the upper water column are an important source of B12 to marine phytoplankton. The addition of iron alone increased the growth of Phaeocystis antarctica relative to diatoms, whereas in an experiment where iron and B12 stimulated total phytoplankton growth, the diatom Pseudonitzschia subcurvata went from comprising approximately 70% of the phytoplankton community to over 90%. Cobalt additions, with and without iron, did not alter Chl a biomass relative to controls and iron additions alone in the Ross Sea. Iron and vitamin B12 plus iron treatments caused reductions in the DMSP (dimethyl sulfoniopropionate) : Chl a ratio relative to the control and B12 treatments, consistent with the notion of an antioxidant function for DMSP. These results demonstrate the importance of a vitamin to phytoplankton growth and community composition in the marine environment.
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- 2007
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44. Effects of changing continuous iron input rates on a Southern Ocean algal assemblage
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Peter N. Sedwick, Giacomo R. DiTullio, A. C. Crossley, Clinton E. Hare, S. F. Riseman, David A. Hutchins, and Linda C. Popels
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Nutrient cycle ,biology ,fungi ,Aquatic Science ,Biogenic silica ,Oceanography ,biology.organism_classification ,Diatom ,Nutrient ,Nanophytoplankton ,Phytoplankton ,Upwelling ,Redfield ratio - Abstract
The upwelling of nutrients and iron (Fe) sustains biological production in much of the Southern Ocean. Using a shipboard natural community continuous culture system (Ecostat), we supplied a single added Fe concentration at two dilution rates chosen to examine the effects of variations in realistic growth and loss rates on an Fe-limited algal community in the Antarctic Zone south of Australia. A parallel growout experiment provided “no-dilution” +Fe and −Fe controls. In the continuous flow experiment, phytoplankton biomass was lower and more constant throughout the incubation and major nutrients were never depleted. Nanophytoplankton abundance remained similar in both growout treatments, and therefore, growth of this group did not appear to be Fe-limited. The addition of Fe in a continuous fashion resulted in a community co-dominated by both small diatoms and nanophytoplankton. Increases in dilution rate favored diatom species that were smaller and faster-growing, as well as non-silicified algal groups. Particulate carbon (PC) to particulate nitrogen (PN) ratios increased above the Redfield ratio when Fe was added in a continuous fashion, while biogenic silica (BSi) to PC and PN ratios decreased 2–3 fold in the continuous flow experiment compared to the initial conditions and the parallel growout control experiment. Photosynthetic efficiency increased in the continuous flow treatments above the control but remained significantly lower than in the 1.4 nM Fe addition. The results of our shipboard continuous flow experiments are compared and contrasted with those of the mesoscale Southern Ocean Iron RElease Experiment (SOIREE) carried out at the same site. Our results suggest that increases in natural dilution rates (i.e. vertical turbulent diffusion) in polar Antarctic waters could shift the algal community towards smaller, faster-growing algal species, thus having a major effect on nutrient cycling and carbon export in the Southern Ocean.
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- 2007
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45. Effects of iron concentration on pigment composition in Phaeocystis antarctica grown at low irradiance
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Peter N. Sedwick, Nathan S. Garcia, S. F. Riseman, and Giacomo R. DiTullio
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Biogeochemical cycle ,biology ,fungi ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Photosynthetic pigment ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pigment ,Oceanography ,chemistry ,Algae ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Environmental Chemistry ,Fucoxanthin ,Composition (visual arts) ,Autotroph ,Carbon ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Interpretation of photosynthetic pigment data using iterative programs such as CHEMTAX are widely used to examine algal community structure in the surface ocean. The accuracy of such programs relies on understanding the effects of environmental parameters on the pigment composition of taxonomically diverse algal groups. Phaeocystis antarctica is an important contributor to total autotrophic production and the biogeochemical cycling of carbon and sulfur in the Southern Ocean. Here we report the results of a laboratory culture experiment in which we examined the effects of ambient dissolved iron concentration on the pigment composition of colonial P. antarctica, using a new P. antarctica strain isolated from the southern Ross Sea in December 2003. Low-iron ( 3) indicative of Fe stress. We also observed that the ratio of fucoxanthin to 19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin (Fuco:Hex ratio) was highly correlated (r 2 = 0.82) with initial dissolved Fe concentration, with Fuco:Hex ratios
- Published
- 2007
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46. Evidence for high iron requirements of colonial Phaeocystis antarctica at low irradiance
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Peter N. Sedwick, S. F. Riseman, Nathan S. Garcia, Giacomo R. DiTullio, and Chris M. Marsay
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Chlorophyll a ,Biomass (ecology) ,biology ,fungi ,Irradiance ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oceanography ,Algae ,chemistry ,Phytoplankton ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecosystem ,Seawater ,Growth rate ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
We have carried out field and laboratory experiments to examine the iron requirements of colonial Phaeocystis antarctica in the Ross Sea. In December 2003, we performed an iron/light-manipulation bioassay experiment in the Ross Sea polynya, using an algal assemblage dominated by colonial Phaeocystis antarctica, collected from surface waters with an ambient dissolved Fe concentration of ∼0.4 nM. Results from this experiment suggest that P. antarctica growth rates were enhanced at high irradiance (∼50% of incident surface irradiance) but were unaffected by iron addition, and that elevated irradiance mediated a significant decrease in cellular chlorophyll a content. We also conducted a laboratory iron dose–response bioassay experiment using a unialgal, non-axenic strain of colonial P. antarctica and low-iron (
- Published
- 2007
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47. Influence of iron on algal community composition and physiological status in the Peru upwelling system
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Mark E. Geesey, Melissa B. Alm, Jennifer M. Maucher, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Kenneth W. Bruland, and Sarah F. Riseman
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Chlorophyll a ,biology ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Photosynthesis ,biology.organism_classification ,Haptophyte ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Diatom ,chemistry ,Phytoplankton ,Botany ,Upwelling ,Prochlorococcus ,Scavenging - Abstract
Phytoplankton community structure in the eastern Equatorial Pacific (EEP) and the Peru upwelling system was determined using ChemTax analysis of pigment data. Photosynthetic efficiencies (F v : F m ), concentrations of macronutrients, iron (Fe), and the redox proteins flavodoxin (Flv) and ferredoxin (Fd) were used to assess the physiological status of the algal communities with respect to Fe. Diel periodicity in F v :F m ratios was observed in Fe-stressed populations of Prochlorococcus and type 4 haptophytes (Phaeocystis) in the EEP with daytime values (0.05-0.30) displaying a distinct noontime minimum. On the Peruvian continental shelf, upwelling of Fe-rich subsurface waters led to massive diatom blooms (reaching chlorophyll a [Chl a] values >45 μg L -1 ) with near-maximal photosynthetic efficiencies (F v : F m >0.6). Assimilation and luxurious uptake of Fe, scavenging processes, and Ek-man transport off the shelf break led to rapid decreases in Fe concentration and dramatic shifts in phytoplankton assemblages. The shelf break region was dominated by cryptophyte populations with relatively high photosynthetic competency (F v :F m = 0.4-0.5). In this region, subnanomolar Fe concentrations limited further diatom growth. As Fe concentrations decreased offshore, haptophyte (coccolithophorids and Phaeocystis) populations contributed approximately 40-80% toward the total Chl a concentration. Haptophyte populations were Fe stressed, as determined by high Flv indices (Flv [Flv + Fd] -1 ) and low photosynthetic efficiencies (F v : F m ∼0.3). The Flv index was very high in regions where Fe concentrations were ≤0.2 nmol L -1 , but it was 0 when Fe levels were >0.4 nmol L -1 . In the Peru upwelling, Fe concentrations between 0.2 and 0.4 nmol L -1 represented a transitional region that marked the threshold switch in community Fd and Flv expression.
- Published
- 2005
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48. Iron, macronutrients and diatom blooms in the Peru upwelling regime: brown and blue waters of Peru
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Giacomo R. DiTullio, Kenneth W. Bruland, Eden L. Rue, and Geoffrey J. Smith
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Chlorophyll a ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Continental shelf ,General Chemistry ,Oceanography ,biology.organism_classification ,Bottom water ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Diatom ,chemistry ,Ocean gyre ,Environmental Chemistry ,Upwelling ,Hydrography ,Surface water ,Geology ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Surface water transects and vertical profiles for dissolved iron, macronutrients, chlorophyll a (Chl a), and hydrographic data were obtained in the Peru upwelling regime during August and September 2000. The supply of the micronutrient iron, relative to that of the macronutrients nitrate, phosphate and silicic acid, is shown to play a critical role in allowing extensive diatom blooms to develop in the Peru upwelling system. The extremely high-chlorophyll bbrown waters of PeruQ (with Chl a concentrations between 20 and 45 Ag/l) result from massive diatom blooms with maximal photochemical efficiencies (Fv/Fm N0.6) occurring in the iron-rich upwelling region observed over the broad continental shelf off northern and central Peru. The source of the upwelled water in this region is the nutrient-rich subsurface countercurrent in contact with the organicrich shelf sediments. This subsurface shelf water is suboxic and has extremely high concentrations of dissolved Fe (N50 nM) in the near-bottom waters. In marked contrast, relatively low-chlorophyll bblue watersQ (Chl a b2 Ag/l) with low concentrations of dissolved Fe (b0.1 nM) and high unutilized macronutrient concentrations are observed in the coastal upwelled waters along the southern coast of Peru and in the offshore regions of the Peru Current. Southern Peru is a region without a wide shelf to serve as a source of iron and, as a result, dissolved Fe concentrations in the near-bottom suboxic waters of this region are an order-ofmagnitude lower than observed off northern and central Peru. In addition, the offshore Peru Current is a broad, Fe-limited, highnitrate, lower than expected chlorophyll region extending hundreds of kilometers offshore into the northeast region of the South Pacific subtropical gyre and northwestward into the South Equatorial Pacific. D 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2005
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49. Phytoplankton community structure changes following simulated upwelled iron inputs in the Peru upwelling region
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Steven W. Wilhelm, Kenneth W. Bruland, Giacomo R. DiTullio, Eden L. Rue, David A. Hutchins, Charles G. Trick, and Clinton E. Hare
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Diatom ,Nutrient ,Oceanography ,biology ,Nanophytoplankton ,Phytoplankton ,Upwelling ,Pelagic zone ,Seawater ,Aquatic Science ,Biogenic silica ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The effects of iron on phytoplankton community structure in 'High Nutrient Low Chlorophyll' regions of the ocean have been examined using both shipboard batch cultures (growouts) and open ocean mesoscale fertilization experiments. The addition of iron in these areas frequently results in a shift from communities dominated by small non-siliceous species towards ones dominated by larger diatoms. We used a new shipboard continuous culture experimental design in iron-limited Peru upwelling waters to examine shifts in phytoplankton structure and their bio- geochemical consequences following simulated upwelled iron inputs. By allowing the added iron to pre-equilibrate with natural seawater ligands, we were able to supply iron in realistic chemical spe- cies at rates and concentrations similar to those found in upwelled waters off Peru. The community shifted strongly from cyanobacteria towards diatoms, and the extent of this shift was proportional to the increase in iron supply. Eukaryotic nanophytoplankton were the first to respond to the iron addi- tion, followed by a community dominated by small pennate diatoms by Day 5. These community changes led to increased biogenic silica:particulate organic nitrogen (BSi:PON) and biogenic silica:particulate organic carbon (BSi:POC) production ratios, driven mainly by increases in diatom numbers with increasing iron. Our experiment demonstrated both similarities to and differences with parallel growout experiments and previous mesoscale fertilization experiments, and suggest that the shipboard continuous culture method can be applied to questions that cannot be easily addressed by either of these previous iron addition techniques.
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- 2005
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50. Elevated levels of dimethylated-sulfur compounds in Lake Bonney, a poorly ventilated Antarctic lake
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Sarah F. Riseman, Nicole Tursich, Giacomo R. DiTullio, John C. Priscu, Peter A. Lee, and Stephen de Mora
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Biogeochemical cycle ,Aquatic ecosystem ,Aquatic Science ,Plankton ,Oceanography ,Dimethylsulfoniopropionate ,Geochemical cycle ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Phytoplankton ,Photic zone ,Surface water ,Geology - Abstract
Lake Bonney is a permanently ice-covered lake in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. The lake has two chemically stratified lobes (referred to as the east and west lobes), each with distinct biogenic sulfur profiles. Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSPp) and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSOp) exceeded 32 and 2 nmol L 21 , respectively, in the photic surface waters of the lake. Maximum DMSPp levels occurred in the deep-chlorophyll layer of both lobes, a zone dominated by chrysophytes and chlorophytes, which are thought to be the source of dimethylated sulfur in the deep waters of the lake following sedimentation and biogeochemical processing. Waters beneath the chemoclines of both lobes are cold (,08C), saline (.3 times seawater), suboxic, and devoid of phytoplankton biomass and activity. Dimethylsulfide (DMS) levels (.330 nmol L 21 ) in the deep west lobe are among the highest recorded in a natural aquatic ecosystem. In contrast, saline waters of the deep east lobe contain relatively little DMS (,70 nmol L 21 ) but high DMSOd (270 nmol L 21 ), with the latter being the highest observed in any natural aquatic ecosystem. We argue that the differences in the biogenic sulfur profiles between the deep waters of the two lobes arise principally from subtle differences in the redox conditions found in each lobe.
- Published
- 2004
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