2015
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.12629
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Seasonal assemblages and short‐lived blooms in coastal north‐west Atlantic Ocean bacterioplankton

Abstract: Temperate oceans are inhabited by diverse and temporally dynamic bacterioplankton communities. However, the role of the environment, resources and phytoplankton dynamics in shaping marine bacterioplankton communities at different time scales remains poorly constrained. Here, we combined time series observations (time scales of weeks to years) with molecular analysis of formalin-fixed samples from a coastal inlet of the north-west Atlantic Ocean to show that a combination of temperature, nitrate, small phytopla… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(66 citation statements)
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References 80 publications
(109 reference statements)
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“…The nitrite-oxidizing genus Nitrospina has been observed in winter-only samples from both Antarctic (Grzymski et al, 2012) and Arctic (Alonso-Sáez et al, 2010) waters, as well as in temperate waters (El-Swais et al, 2015) and has also been correlated with amoA-containing Thaumarchaeota in Monterey Bay (Mincer et al, 2007). Whilst we recorded generally higher levels of all three taxa in winter surface and year-round deeper waters, active populations were still detected in surface waters in summer months, albeit at much lower levels.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 45%
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“…The nitrite-oxidizing genus Nitrospina has been observed in winter-only samples from both Antarctic (Grzymski et al, 2012) and Arctic (Alonso-Sáez et al, 2010) waters, as well as in temperate waters (El-Swais et al, 2015) and has also been correlated with amoA-containing Thaumarchaeota in Monterey Bay (Mincer et al, 2007). Whilst we recorded generally higher levels of all three taxa in winter surface and year-round deeper waters, active populations were still detected in surface waters in summer months, albeit at much lower levels.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 45%
“…We observed distinct seasonal fluctuations in prokaryote diversity, comprising high richness in the darker autumn and winter months and lower richness in the late spring and summer (Gilbert et al, 2012;El-Swais et al, 2015), similar to other surveys of surface waters in high latitude marine ecosystems (Murray et al, 1998;Murray and Grzymski, 2007;Ghiglione and Murray, 2012;Grzymski et al, 2012;Ladau et al, 2013). Phylotype richness peaked in January and then decreased through the year (Figure 4) until the annual minimum in August, coincident with the late summer phytoplankton post-bloom, before increasing again in the late autumn.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
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