Uneven response of phytoplankton-bacteria coupling under Saharan dust pulse and ultraviolet radiation in the south-western Mediterranean Sea
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Carrillo Lechuga, Presentación; González Olalla, Juan Manuel; Jabalera Cabrerizo, Marco; Villar Argáiz, Manuel; Medina Sánchez, Juan ManuelEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Heterotrophic bacterial carbon demand Heterotrophic bacterial production Primary production
Fecha
2024-04-06Referencia bibliográfica
P. Carrillo et al. Uneven response of phytoplankton-bacteria coupling under Saharan dust pulse and ultraviolet radiation in the south-western Mediterranean Sea 927 (2024) 172220. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172220]
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) (METAS Project, CGL2015-67682-R to PC and JMMS); Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovaci´on and by the European NextGenerationEU/PRTR (TED2021-131262B-I00 to JMM-S and PC); Campus de Excelencia Internacional del Mar (CeiMar, CEIJ-008 to MJC).Resumen
The microbial carbon (C) flux in the ocean is a key functional process governed by the excretion of organic
carbon by phytoplankton (EOC) and heterotrophic bacterial carbon demand (BCD). Ultraviolet radiation (UVR)
levels in upper mixed layers and increasing atmospheric dust deposition from arid regions may alter the degree of
coupling in the phytoplankton-bacteria relationship (measured as BCD:EOC ratio) with consequences for the Cflux
through these compartments in marine oligotrophic ecosystem. Firstly, we performed a field study across the
south-western (SW) Mediterranean Sea to assess the degree of coupling (BCD:EOC) and how it may be related to
metabolic balance (total primary production: community respiration; PPT:CR). Secondly, we conducted a
microcosm experiment in two contrasting areas (heterotrophic nearshore and autotrophic open sea) to test the
impact of UVR and dust interaction on microbial C flux. In the field study, we found that BCD was not satisfied by
EOC (i.e., BCD:EOC >1; uncoupled phytoplankton-bacteria relationship). BCD:EOC ratio was negatively related
to PPT:CR ratio across the SW Mediterranean Sea. A spatial pattern emerged, i.e. in autotrophic open sea stations
uncoupling was less severe (BCD:EOC ranged 1–2), whereas heterotrophic nearshore stations uncoupling was
more severe (BCD:EOC > 2). In the experimental study, in the seawater both enriched with dust and under UVR,
BCD:EOC ratio decreased by stimulating autotrophic processes (particulate primary production (PPP) and EOC)
in the heterotrophic nearshore area, whereas BCD:EOC increased by stimulating heterotrophic processes [heterotrophic bacterial production (HBP), bacterial growth efficiency (BGE), bacterial respiration (BR)] in the
autotrophic open sea. Our results show that this spatial pattern could be reversed under future UVR × Dust
scenario. Overall, the impact of greater dust deposition and higher UVR levels will alter the phytoplanktonbacteria
C-flux with consequences for the productivity of both communities, their standing stocks, and ultimately,
the ecosystem’s metabolic balance at the sea surface.