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Interactions between specific phytoplankton and bacteria affect lake bacterial community succession
Author(s) -
Paver Sara F.,
Hayek Kevin R.,
Gano Kelsey A.,
Fagen Jennie R.,
Brown Christopher T.,
DavisRichardson Austin G.,
Crabb David B.,
RosarioPassapera Richard,
Giongo Adriana,
Triplett Eric W.,
Kent Angela D.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1111/1462-2920.12131
Subject(s) - phytoplankton , biology , mesocosm , ecology , plankton , ecological succession , bacteria , botany , nutrient , genetics
Summary Time‐series observations and a phytoplankton manipulation experiment were combined to test the hypothesis that phytoplankton succession effects changes in bacterial community composition. Three humic lakes were sampled weekly M ay– A ugust and correlations between relative abundances of specific phytoplankton and bacterial operational taxonomic units ( OTUs ) in each time series were determined. To experimentally characterize the influence of phytoplankton, bacteria from each lake were incubated with phytoplankton from one of the three lakes or no phytoplankton. Following incubation, variation in bacterial community composition explained by phytoplankton treatment increased 65%, while the variation explained by bacterial source decreased 64%. Free‐living bacteria explained, on average, over 60% of the difference between phytoplankton and corresponding no‐phytoplankton control treatments. Fourteen out of the 101 bacterial OTUs that exhibited positively correlated patterns of abundance with specific algal populations in time‐series observations were enriched in mesocosms following incubation with phytoplankton, and one out of 59 negatively correlated bacterial OTUs was depleted in phytoplankton treatments. Bacterial genera enriched in mesocosms containing specific phytoplankton assemblages included L imnohabitans (clade betI ‐ A ), B dellovibrio and M itsuaria . These results suggest that effects of phytoplankton on certain bacterial populations, including bacteria tracking seasonal changes in algal‐derived organic matter, result in correlations between algal and bacterial community dynamics.