Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/114861
Title: Deep ocean prokaryotes and fluorescent dissolved organic matter reflect the history of the water masses across the Atlantic Ocean
Authors: Gómez Letona, Markel 
Arístegui Ruiz, Javier 
Hernández Hernández, Nauzet 
Álvarez-Salgado, Xosé Antón
Álvarez, Marta
Delgadillo, Erick
Pérez-Lorenzo, María
Teira, Eva
Hernández León, Santiago Manuel 
Sebastián Caumel, Marta 
UNESCO Clasification: 251007 Oceanografía física
251006 Procesos del fondo marino
251001 Oceanografía biológica
Keywords: Dissolved organic matter
Prokaryotic community
Water mass
Dark ocean
Atlantic Ocean
Issue Date: 2022
Project: "Migradores y Flujo Activo en El Océano Atlántico" 
Flujos de Carbono en Un Sistema de Afloramiento Costero (Cabo Blanco, Nw de África); Modulación A Submesoscala de la Producción, Exportación y Consumo de Carbono 
Impacto biogeoquímico de procesos a mesoescala y submesoescala a lo largo del ciclo de vida de remolinos ciclónicos y anticiclónicos:variabilidad planctónica y productividad 
Journal: Progress in Oceanography 
Abstract: Organic matter is known to influence community composition and metabolism of marine prokaryotes. However, few studies have addressed this linkage in the deep ocean. We studied the relationship between fluorescent dissolved organic matter and prokaryotic community composition in meso- and bathypelagic water masses along a surface productivity gradient crossing the subtropical and tropical Atlantic Ocean. Four fluorescence components were identified, three humic-like and one protein-like. The distributions of the humic-like components were significantly explained by water mass mixing, apparent oxygen utilisation (AOU) and epipelagic productivity proxies in varying degrees, while the protein-like component was explained only by water mass mixing and epipelagic productivity. The diversity and taxonomic composition of the prokaryotic community differed between water masses: the Nitrosopumilales order dominated in water masses with high AOU and humic-like fluorescence (notably, the SubPolar Mode Water), and tended to co-occur with Marine Group II archaea, the SAR324 clade and Thiomicrospirales, while bathypelagic water masses displayed greater abundances of members of Marinimicrobia, SAR202 and SAR324. Water mass mixing regression models suggested that the distribution of some taxa (e.g., Marinimicrobia, SAR202) was dominated by mixing and selection within the water masses during ageing, while others (chiefly, Alteromonadales) were mostly influenced by local processes. Our results suggest a link between the composition of the prokaryotic community, oxygen utilisation and the signalof fluorescent dissolved organic matter, and has implications for our understanding of the processes that shape the carbon cycling and the prokaryotic communities in the deep ocean.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/114861
ISSN: 0079-6611
DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2022.102819
Source: Progress in Oceanography [ISSN 0079-6611], n. 205
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