4.8 Article

Microbial dynamics of elevated carbon flux in the open ocean's abyss

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2018269118

Keywords

carbon export; biological carbon pump; deep sea; marine microbes; open ocean

Funding

  1. Simons Foundation [329108, 721223]
  2. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [GBMF 3777, GBMF 3794]

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Studies show that elevated carbon flux events in the open ocean lead to increased delivery of carbon from surface waters to the seafloor, with specific microbial taxa positively correlating with these events. Microbial communities enriched on sinking particles during summer ECF events included various types of bacteria, protists, and diatoms, while those during spring ECF events were different, indicating a seasonality in microbial compositions. Additionally, deep-sea bacteria displayed rapid responses to elevated organic matter inputs during summer ECF events.
In the open ocean, elevated carbon flux (ECF) events increase the delivery of particulate carbon from surface waters to the seafloor by severalfold compared to other times of year. Since microbes play central roles in primary production and sinking particle formation, they contribute greatly to carbon export to the deep sea. Few studies, however, have quantitatively linked ECF events with the specific microbial assemblages that drive them. Here, we identify key microbial taxa and functional traits on deep-sea sinking particles that correlate positively with ECF events. Microbes enriched on sinking particles in summer ECF events included symbiotic and free-living diazotrophic cyanobacteria, rhizosolenid diatoms, phototrophic and heterotrophic protists, and photoheterotrophic and copiotrophic bacteria. Particle-attached bacteria reaching the abyss during summer ECF events encoded metabolic pathways reflecting their surface water origins, including oxygenic and aerobic anoxygenic photosynthesis, nitrogen fixation, and proteorhodopsin-based photoheterotrophy. The abundances of some deep-sea bacteria also correlated positively with summer ECF events, suggesting rapid bathypelagic responses to elevated organic matter inputs. Biota enriched on sinking particles during a spring ECF event were distinct from those found in summer, and included rhizaria, copepods, fungi, and different bacterial taxa. At other times over our 3-y study, mid- and deep-water particle colonization, predation, degradation, and repackaging (by deep-sea bacteria, protists, and animals) appeared to shape the biotic composition of particles reaching the abyss. Our analyses reveal key microbial players and biological processes involved in particle formation, rapid export, and consumption, that may influence the ocean's biological pump and help sustain deep-sea ecosystems.

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