TY - JOUR
T1 - Latitudinal gradients and ocean fronts strongly influence protist communities in the southern Pacific Ocean
AU - Sturm, Daniela
AU - Morton, Peter
AU - Langer, Gerald
AU - Balch, William M
AU - Wheeler, Glen
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Protist communities in the southern Pacific Ocean make a major contribution to global biogeochemical cycling, but remain understudied due to their remote location. We therefore have limited understanding of how large-scale physical gradients (e.g. temperature) and mesoscale oceanographic features (e.g. fronts) influence microeukaryote diversity in this region. We performed a high-resolution examination of protist communities along a latitudinal transect (>3000 km) at 150°W in the central southern Pacific Ocean that encompassed major frontal regions, including the subtropical front (STF), the subantarctic front (SAF), and the polar front (PF). We identified distinct microbial communities along the transect that were primarily delineated by the positions of the STF and PF. Some taxa were not constricted by these environmental boundaries and were able to span frontal regions, such as the colonial haptophyte Phaeocystis. Our findings also support the presence of a latitudinal diversity gradient (LDG) of decreasing diversity of the protist community with increasing latitude, although some individual taxa, notably the diatoms, do not adhere to this rule. Our findings show that oceanographic features and large-scale physical gradients have important impacts on marine protist communities in the southern Pacific Ocean that are likely to strongly influence their response to future environmental change.
AB - Protist communities in the southern Pacific Ocean make a major contribution to global biogeochemical cycling, but remain understudied due to their remote location. We therefore have limited understanding of how large-scale physical gradients (e.g. temperature) and mesoscale oceanographic features (e.g. fronts) influence microeukaryote diversity in this region. We performed a high-resolution examination of protist communities along a latitudinal transect (>3000 km) at 150°W in the central southern Pacific Ocean that encompassed major frontal regions, including the subtropical front (STF), the subantarctic front (SAF), and the polar front (PF). We identified distinct microbial communities along the transect that were primarily delineated by the positions of the STF and PF. Some taxa were not constricted by these environmental boundaries and were able to span frontal regions, such as the colonial haptophyte Phaeocystis. Our findings also support the presence of a latitudinal diversity gradient (LDG) of decreasing diversity of the protist community with increasing latitude, although some individual taxa, notably the diatoms, do not adhere to this rule. Our findings show that oceanographic features and large-scale physical gradients have important impacts on marine protist communities in the southern Pacific Ocean that are likely to strongly influence their response to future environmental change.
KW - Pacific Ocean
KW - Protist
KW - Phaeocystis
KW - Diversity
KW - Fronts
U2 - 10.1093/femsec/fiae137
DO - 10.1093/femsec/fiae137
M3 - Article
C2 - 39528233
SN - 1574-6941
VL - 100
JO - FEMS microbiology ecology (Print)
JF - FEMS microbiology ecology (Print)
IS - 12
ER -