Publication | Open Access
Seasonal and Spatial Variability of Bacterial and Archaeal Assemblages in the Coastal Waters near Anvers Island, Antarctica
476
Citations
43
References
1998
Year
EngineeringPolar EnvironmentsRrna Hybridization TechniquesMarine SystemsOceanographyArchaeaTotal RrnaUnderwater MicroscopyCold SeepsArchaeal RrnaMicrobial EcologySpatial VariabilityEnvironmental MicrobiologyBiological OceanographyOceanic SystemsMicrobial DiversityCoastal WatersMarine BiotaPhytoplankton EcologyMicrobiologyMarine BiologyMedicineAnvers Island
The study investigates the ecology of Antarctic planktonic prokaryotes following reports of high archaeal abundance in coastal waters. The authors used rRNA hybridization and DGGE of the bacterial V3 region to assess picoplankton assemblage variation. Archaeal rRNA abundance varied seasonally and spatially, being higher offshore (~24%) and decreasing markedly in nearshore waters during summer, with a significant negative correlation to phytoplankton levels.
ABSTRACT A previous report of high levels of members of the domain Archaea in Antarctic coastal waters prompted us to investigate the ecology of Antarctic planktonic prokaryotes. rRNA hybridization techniques and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis of the bacterial V3 region were used to study variation in Antarctic picoplankton assemblages. In Anvers Island nearshore waters during late winter to early spring, the amounts of archaeal rRNA ranged from 17.1 to 3.6% of the total picoplankton rRNA in 1996 and from 16.0 to 1.0% of the total rRNA in 1995. Offshore in the Palmer Basin, the levels of archaeal rRNA throughout the water column were higher (average, 24% of the total rRNA) during the same period in 1996. The archaeal rRNA levels in nearshore waters followed a highly seasonal pattern and markedly decreased during the austral summer at two stations. There was a significant negative correlation between archaeal rRNA levels and phytoplankton levels (as inferred from chlorophyll a concentrations) in nearshore surface waters during the early spring of 1995 and during an 8-month period in 1996 and 1997. In situ hybridization experiments revealed that 5 to 14% of DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole)-stained cells were archaeal, corresponding to 0.9 × 10 4 to 2.7 × 10 4 archaeal cells per ml, in late winter 1996 samples. Analysis of bacterial ribosomal DNA fragments by DGGE revealed that the assemblage composition may reflect changes in water column stability, depth, or season. The data indicate that changes in Antarctic seasons are accompanied by significant shifts in the species composition of bacterioplankton assemblages and by large decreases in the relative proportion of archaeal rRNA in the nearshore water column.
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