Tesis
Biotic factors drive bacterioplankton community in a tropical coastal site of the equatorial atlantic ocean
Fecha
2016-09-01Registro en:
Autor
Kavagutti, Vinicius Silva
Institución
Resumen
The relationship between latitude and microbial diversity in the ocean is
controversial. Niche models predict higher richness at high latitudes in winter, while
snapshot field-sampling point towards higher richness at intermediate latitudes, with
lower values both towards equatorial and Polar Regions. However, given the dynamic
nature of ocean’s ecosystem it is difficult to account for temporal variations in empirical
assessments of microbial biodiversity. Here, we compared the components of diversity
(richness and evenness) and microbial population stability (coefficient of variation) in
two coastal ocean observatories with similar trophic state located in contrasting
latitudes, one located in the Equatorial Atlantic Ocean, and one temperate located in the
Northwestern Mediterranean Sea, to evaluate which factors drive the dynamics of
microbial communities in each site. Our observations support the view that, as animals
and plants, microbial communities exhibit higher (or at least similar) richness towards
the equator, at least in the coastal ocean. We also found evidence of increasing stability
with increasing evenness in tropical microbial communities when compared to the
temperate ones. Temperature and silicates drove temperate free-living prokaryotic
communities, while tropical ones were driven by stochastic factors such as biotic
interactions with eukaryotes. We propose a conceptual framework where microbial
community composition would be driven by deterministic factors in higher latitudes and
once the factor temperature is removed moving towards the equator, more stochastic
factors such as biotic interactions would emerge as the main factors shaping microbial
communities. This study highlights the importance of comparative studies on Eulerian
time-series distributed at different latitudes to fully understand the diversity patterns of
microbial communities in the ocean.