4.6 Article

Increasing Hydrostatic Pressure Impacts the Prokaryotic Diversity during Emiliania huxleyi Aggregates Degradation

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13192616

Keywords

biological carbon pump; carbon cycle; mesopelagic; mineral ballast; coccolithophorid; Emiliania huxleyi; prokaryotes; biodegradation; hydrostatic pressure

Funding

  1. Labex OT-Med Investissements d'Avenir, French National Research Agency (ANR) through the A*Midex ROBIN project [ANR-11-LABEX-0061, ANR-11-IDEX-0001-684 02]
  2. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) [1166-39417]

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The study used a particle sinking simulator system (PASS) to track the sinking process of laboratory-grown Emiliania huxleyi aggregates in the North Atlantic Ocean, finding that pressure affects prokaryotic degradation and respiration rate, while increasing hydrostatic pressure reduces prokaryotic diversity and species richness.
In the dark ocean, the balance between the heterotrophic carbon demand and the supply of sinking carbon through the biological carbon pump remains poorly constrained. In situ tracking of the dynamics of microbial degradation processes occurring on the gravitational sinking particles is still challenging. Our particle sinking simulator system (PASS) intends to mimic as closely as possible the in situ variations in pressure and temperature experienced by gravitational sinking particles. Here, we used the PASS to simultaneously track geochemical and microbial changes that occurred during the sinking through the mesopelagic zone of laboratory-grown Emiliania huxleyi aggregates amended by a natural microbial community sampled at 105 m depth in the North Atlantic Ocean. The impact of pressure on the prokaryotic degradation of POC and dissolution of E. huxleyi-derived calcite was not marked compared to atmospheric pressure. In contrast, using global O-2 consumption monitored in real-time inside the high-pressure bottles using planar optodes via a sapphire window, a reduction of respiration rate was recorded in surface-originated community assemblages under increasing pressure conditions. Moreover, using a 16S rRNA metabarcoding survey, we demonstrated a drastic difference in transcriptionally active prokaryotes associated with particles, incubated either at atmospheric pressure or under linearly increasing hydrostatic pressure conditions. The increase in hydrostatic pressure reduced both the phylogenetic diversity and the species richness. The incubation at atmospheric pressure, however, promoted an opportunistic community of fast degraders from the surface (Saccharospirillaceae, Hyphomonadaceae, and Pseudoalteromonadaceae), known to be associated with surface phytoplankton blooms. In contrast, the incubation under increasing pressure condition incubations revealed an increase in the particle colonizer families Flavobacteriaceae and Rhodobacteraceae, and also Colwelliaceae, which are known to be adapted to high hydrostatic pressure. Altogether, our results underline the need to perform biodegradation experiments of particles in conditions that mimic pressure and temperature encountered during their sinking along the water column to be ecologically relevant.

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