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Hydrography shapes community composition and diversity of amo A‐containing T haumarchaeota in the coastal waters off central C hile
Author(s) -
Bertagnolli Anthony D.,
Ulloa Osvaldo
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
environmental microbiology reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.229
H-Index - 69
ISSN - 1758-2229
DOI - 10.1111/1758-2229.12579
Subject(s) - hydrography , water column , ammonia monooxygenase , salinity , taxon , oceanography , biology , ordination , dominance (genetics) , clade , ecology , environmental chemistry , zoology , environmental science , archaea , chemistry , phylogenetics , geology , gene , genetics
Summary Thaumarchaea are often abundant in low oxygen marine environments, and recent kinetic studies indicate a capacity for aerobic ammonia oxidation at vanishingly low oxygen levels (nM). However, molecular diversity surveys targeting this group to high sequencing coverage are limited, and how these populations are coupled to changes in dissolved oxygen remains unknown. In this study, the ammonia monooxygenase subunit A ( amo A) gene was sequenced from samples collected in the Chilean coast (36.5 °S), a system prone to recurrent seasonal hypoxia and anoxia, at several depths over one year, to read depths that saturated coverage statistics. Temperature, salinity and depth displayed a stronger impact on community composition than chemical and biological variables, such as dissolved oxygen. The Nitrosopumilus water‐column A clade (WCA) displayed high proportional representation in all samples (42%–100% of all amoA OTUs). The two dominant WCA OTUs displayed differences in their distributions that were inversely correlated with one another, providing the first evidence for intra‐subgroup specific differences in the distributions among closely related WCA Thaumarcheota. Nitrosopumilus water‐column B (WCB) representatives displayed increased proportional abundances (42%) at deeper depths during the spring and summer, were highly coupled to decreased dissolved oxygen conditions and were non‐detectable during the austral winter. The depth of sequencing also enabled observation of lower abundance taxa that are typically not observed in marine environments, such as members of the genus Nitrosotalea amid austral winter surface waters. This study highlights a strong coupling between Thaumarchaeal community diversity and hydrographic variables, is the first to highlight intra‐subclade depth specific shifts in community diversity amongst members of the WCA clade, and links the WCB clade to upwelling conditions associated with seasonal oxygen depletion.