AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the seasonal dynamics of free-living (FL) and particle-attached (PA) bacteria in the Baltic Sea, focusing on their abundance, function, and taxonomy throughout the year.
  • It finds that PA bacteria peak in abundance during summer, while FL bacteria maintain higher levels for six months, with variations in growth efficiency reflecting significant seasonal changes.
  • Additionally, 16S rRNA gene analyses reveal correlations between bacterial communities, environmental factors, and metabolic activities, highlighting the role of these bacteria in organic matter utilization and their importance in understanding ecosystem responses to environmental changes.

Article Abstract

Although free-living (FL) and particle-attached (PA) bacteria are recognized as ecologically distinct compartments of marine microbial food-webs, few, if any, studies have determined their dynamics in abundance, function (production, respiration and substrate utilization) and taxonomy over a yearly cycle. In the Baltic Sea, abundance and production of PA bacteria (defined as the size-fraction >3.0 μm) peaked over 3 months in summer (6 months for FL bacteria), largely coinciding with blooms of (). Pronounced changes in the growth efficiency (range 0.05-0.27) of FL bacteria (defined as the size-fraction <3.0 μm) indicated the magnitude of seasonal variability of ecological settings bacteria experience. Accordingly, 16S rRNA gene analyses of bacterial community composition uncovered distinct correlations between taxa, environmental variables and metabolisms, including associated with elevated hydrolytic enzyme activity in winter and with utilization of algal-derived substrates during summer. Further, our results suggested a substrate-controlled succession in the PA fraction, from using polymers to and using monomers across the spring to autumn phytoplankton bloom transition. Collectively, our findings emphasize pronounced seasonal changes in both the composition of the bacterial community in the PA and FL size-fractions and their contribution to organic matter utilization and carbon cycling. This is important for interpreting microbial ecosystem function-responses to natural and human-induced environmental changes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9533715PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.834675DOI Listing

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