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Phenology of high-elevation pelagic bacteria: the roles of meteorologic variability, catchment inputs and thermal stratification in structuring communities.
- Source :
-
The ISME journal [ISME J] 2009 Jan; Vol. 3 (1), pp. 13-30. Date of Electronic Publication: 2008 Sep 11. - Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- Many eukaryotic communities exhibit predictable seasonality in species composition, but such phenological patterns are not well-documented in bacterial communities. This study quantified seasonal variation in the community composition of bacterioplankton in a high-elevation lake in the Sierra Nevada of California over a 3-year period of 2004-2006. Bacterioplankton exhibited consistent phenological patterns, with distinct, interannually recurring community types characteristic of the spring snowmelt, ice-off and fall-overturn periods in the lake. Thermal stratification was associated with the emergence of specific communities each summer and increased community heterogeneity throughout the water column. Two key environmental variables modulated by regional meteorologic variation, lake residence time and thermal stability, predicted the timing of occurrence of community types each year with 75% accuracy, and each corresponded with different aspects of variation in community composition (orthogonal ordination axes). Seasonal variation in dissolved organic matter source was characterized fluorometrically in 2005 and was highly correlated with overall variation in bacterial community structure (r(Mantel)=0.75, P<0.001) and with the relative contributions of specific phylotypes within the Cyanobacteria, Actinobacteria and beta-Proteobacteria. The seasonal dynamics of bacterial clades (tracked through coupling of randomized clone sequence libraries to restriction fragment length polymorphism fingerprints) matched previous results from alpine lakes and were variously related to solute inputs, thermal stability and temperature. Taken together, these results describe a phenology of high-elevation bacterioplankton communities linked to climate-driven physical and chemical lake characteristics already known to regulate eukaryotic plankton community structure.
- Subjects :
- California
Climate
Cluster Analysis
DNA Fingerprinting
DNA, Bacterial chemistry
DNA, Bacterial genetics
Fresh Water chemistry
Organic Chemicals analysis
Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Temperature
Bacteria classification
Bacteria isolation & purification
Biodiversity
Fresh Water microbiology
Seasons
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1751-7370
- Volume :
- 3
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- The ISME journal
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 18784755
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2008.81