4.6 Article

Vertical community patterns of Labyrinthulomycetes protists reveal their potential importance in the oceanic biological pump

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 1703-1713

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.15709

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Funding

  1. NSFC [91751115]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2016YF0601401]
  3. Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology (Marine Biology and Biotechnology Laboratory) 2018 Open Foundation Program [OF2018NO04]

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This study investigates the significance of Labyrinthulomycetes protists (LP) in the biological pump, revealing their potential vertical export to the deep ocean and their niche partitioning in the pelagic ocean. The high diversity of LP communities and their multiple ecotypes suggest that they can be an important component of the biological pump through their various functions in organic matter transport and decomposition.
The biological pump plays a vital role in exporting organic particles into the deep ocean for long-term carbon sequestration. However, much remains unknown about some of its key microbial players. In this study, Labyrinthulomycetes protists (LP) were used to understand the significance of heterotrophic microeukaryotes in the transport of particulate organic matter from the surface to the dark ocean. Unlike the sharp vertical decrease of prokaryotic biomass, the LP biomass only slightly decreased with depth and eventually exceeded prokaryotic biomass in the bathypelagic layer. Sequencing identified high diversity of the LP communities with a dominance of Aplanochytrium at all depths. Notably, ASVs that were observed in the surface layer comprised similar to 20% of ASVs and similar to 60% of sequences in each of the deeper (including bathypelagic) layers, suggesting potential vertical export of the LP populations to the deep ocean. Further analyses of the vertical patterns of the 50 most abundant ASVs revealed niche partitioning of LP phylotypes in the pelagic ocean, including those that could decompose organic detritus and/or facilitate the formation of fast-sinking particles. Overall, this study presents several lines of evidence that the LP can be an important component of the biological pump through their multiple ecotypes in the pelagic ocean.

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