Changes in Eukaryotic and Bacterial Communities along a 120 m Transect Associated with a Shallow Marine Hydrothermal Vent

The biocomplexity of sediment communities along a 120 m transect near an arsenic-rich, shallow marine hydrothermal vent at Tutum Bay, Papua New Guinea was thoroughly examined. A count of macro- and meiofaunal organisms was combined with bacterial and eukaryotic SSU rRNA gene surveys to assess biodiv...

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Main Authors: Haydn Rubelmann, David J. Karlen, James R. Garey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00177/full
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spelling doaj-e2b8cd4404864be28dc1a6695388888e2020-11-24T20:54:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452017-06-01410.3389/fmars.2017.00177260088Changes in Eukaryotic and Bacterial Communities along a 120 m Transect Associated with a Shallow Marine Hydrothermal VentHaydn Rubelmann0David J. Karlen1James R. Garey2Department of Cell Biology, Microbiology and Molecular Biology, University of South FloridaTampa, FL, United StatesEnvironmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough CountyTampa, FL, United StatesDepartment of Cell Biology, Microbiology and Molecular Biology, University of South FloridaTampa, FL, United StatesThe biocomplexity of sediment communities along a 120 m transect near an arsenic-rich, shallow marine hydrothermal vent at Tutum Bay, Papua New Guinea was thoroughly examined. A count of macro- and meiofaunal organisms was combined with bacterial and eukaryotic SSU rRNA gene surveys to assess biodiversity. Each site along the transect had distinct microbial communities. Near-vent sites were more similar to each other than sites further from the vent. Some species, such as Ignavibacterium, Caldilinea, and Capitella were only found near-vent. Biodiversity generally increased with distance from the vent. The community composition responded to the presence of hydrothermal fluids with a clear correlation between temperature and thermophilic organisms. Primary production appeared to be a mix of chemo- and phototrophy. Association analyses suggest many potential interactions between organisms occur at certain sites, and that species distributions and interactions occur in the context of complex spatial relationships related to the geochemistry of the hydrothermal vent fluids. While Tutum Bay is heavily influenced by arsenic, no specific correlation between bacteria that metabolize arsenic and the concentration of different oxidation states of arsenic ions was observed, perhaps because very little of the arsenic present was bioavailable. The observed homogeneous distribution of arsenic reducers along the transect could be due to background arsenic metabolism. This study represents a holistic study of biocomplexity on a broad phylogenetic range across a 120 m transect associated with a marine shallow-water hydrothermal vent.Subject Category: Microbial ecology and functional diversity of natural habitats.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00177/fullmicrobial community structure and functionbenthic communitiesinvertebrateshydrothermal ventsarsenic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Haydn Rubelmann
David J. Karlen
James R. Garey
spellingShingle Haydn Rubelmann
David J. Karlen
James R. Garey
Changes in Eukaryotic and Bacterial Communities along a 120 m Transect Associated with a Shallow Marine Hydrothermal Vent
Frontiers in Marine Science
microbial community structure and function
benthic communities
invertebrates
hydrothermal vents
arsenic
author_facet Haydn Rubelmann
David J. Karlen
James R. Garey
author_sort Haydn Rubelmann
title Changes in Eukaryotic and Bacterial Communities along a 120 m Transect Associated with a Shallow Marine Hydrothermal Vent
title_short Changes in Eukaryotic and Bacterial Communities along a 120 m Transect Associated with a Shallow Marine Hydrothermal Vent
title_full Changes in Eukaryotic and Bacterial Communities along a 120 m Transect Associated with a Shallow Marine Hydrothermal Vent
title_fullStr Changes in Eukaryotic and Bacterial Communities along a 120 m Transect Associated with a Shallow Marine Hydrothermal Vent
title_full_unstemmed Changes in Eukaryotic and Bacterial Communities along a 120 m Transect Associated with a Shallow Marine Hydrothermal Vent
title_sort changes in eukaryotic and bacterial communities along a 120 m transect associated with a shallow marine hydrothermal vent
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2017-06-01
description The biocomplexity of sediment communities along a 120 m transect near an arsenic-rich, shallow marine hydrothermal vent at Tutum Bay, Papua New Guinea was thoroughly examined. A count of macro- and meiofaunal organisms was combined with bacterial and eukaryotic SSU rRNA gene surveys to assess biodiversity. Each site along the transect had distinct microbial communities. Near-vent sites were more similar to each other than sites further from the vent. Some species, such as Ignavibacterium, Caldilinea, and Capitella were only found near-vent. Biodiversity generally increased with distance from the vent. The community composition responded to the presence of hydrothermal fluids with a clear correlation between temperature and thermophilic organisms. Primary production appeared to be a mix of chemo- and phototrophy. Association analyses suggest many potential interactions between organisms occur at certain sites, and that species distributions and interactions occur in the context of complex spatial relationships related to the geochemistry of the hydrothermal vent fluids. While Tutum Bay is heavily influenced by arsenic, no specific correlation between bacteria that metabolize arsenic and the concentration of different oxidation states of arsenic ions was observed, perhaps because very little of the arsenic present was bioavailable. The observed homogeneous distribution of arsenic reducers along the transect could be due to background arsenic metabolism. This study represents a holistic study of biocomplexity on a broad phylogenetic range across a 120 m transect associated with a marine shallow-water hydrothermal vent.Subject Category: Microbial ecology and functional diversity of natural habitats.
topic microbial community structure and function
benthic communities
invertebrates
hydrothermal vents
arsenic
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00177/full
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