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      Planktonic eukaryotes in the Chesapeake Bay: contrasting responses of abundant and rare taxa to estuarine gradients

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          ABSTRACT

          Phytoplankton are important drivers of aquatic ecosystem function and environmental health. Their community compositions and distributions are directly impacted by environmental processes and human activities, including in the largest estuary in North America, the Chesapeake Bay. It is crucial to uncover how planktonic eukaryotes play fundamental roles as primary producers and trophic links and sustain estuarine ecosystems. In this study, we investigated the detailed community structure and spatiotemporal variations of planktonic eukaryotes in the Chesapeake Bay across space and time for three consecutive years. A clear seasonal and spatial shift of total, abundant, and rare planktonic eukaryotes was evident, and the pattern recurred interannually. Multiple harmful algal species have been identified in the Bay with varied distribution patterns, such as Karlodinium, Heterosigma akashiwo, Protoperidinium sp., etc. Compared to abundant taxa, rare subcommunities were more sensitive to environmental disturbance in terms of richness, diversity, and distribution. The combined effects of temporal variation (13.3%), nutrient availability (10.0%), and spatial gradients (8.8%) structured the distribution of eukaryotic microbial communities in the Bay. Similar spatiotemporal patterns between planktonic prokaryotes and eukaryotes suggest common mechanisms of adjustment, replacement, and species interaction for planktonic microbiomes under strong estuarine gradients. To our best knowledge, this work represents the first systematic study on planktonic eukaryotes in the Bay. A comprehensive view of the distribution of planktonic microbiomes and their interactions with environmental processes is critical in understanding the underlying microbial mechanisms involved in maintaining the stability, function, and environmental health of estuarine ecosystems.

          IMPORTANCE

          Deep sequencing analysis of planktonic eukaryotes in the Chesapeake Bay reveals high community diversity with many newly recognized phytoplankton taxa. The Chesapeake Bay planktonic eukaryotes show distinct seasonal and spatial variability, with recurring annual patterns of total, abundant, and rare groups. Rare taxa mainly contribute to eukaryotic diversity compared to abundant groups, and they are more sensitive to spatiotemporal variations and environmental filtering. Temporal variations, nutrient availability, and spatial gradients significantly affect the distribution of eukaryotic microbial communities. Similar spatiotemporal patterns in prokaryotes and eukaryotes suggest common mechanisms of adjustment, substitution, and species interactions in planktonic microbiomes under strong estuarine gradients. Interannually recurring patterns demonstrate that diverse eukaryotic taxa have well adapted to the estuarine environment with a long residence time. Further investigations of how human activities impact estuarine planktonic eukaryotes are critical in understanding their essential ecosystem roles and in maintaining environmental safety and public health.

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          Most cited references111

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          Reproducible, interactive, scalable and extensible microbiome data science using QIIME 2

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            Picante: R tools for integrating phylogenies and ecology.

            Picante is a software package that provides a comprehensive set of tools for analyzing the phylogenetic and trait diversity of ecological communities. The package calculates phylogenetic diversity metrics, performs trait comparative analyses, manipulates phenotypic and phylogenetic data, and performs tests for phylogenetic signal in trait distributions, community structure and species interactions. Picante is a package for the R statistical language and environment written in R and C, released under a GPL v2 open-source license, and freely available on the web (http://picante.r-forge.r-project.org) and from CRAN (http://cran.r-project.org).
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              Depletion, degradation, and recovery potential of estuaries and coastal seas.

              Estuarine and coastal transformation is as old as civilization yet has dramatically accelerated over the past 150 to 300 years. Reconstructed time lines, causes, and consequences of change in 12 once diverse and productive estuaries and coastal seas worldwide show similar patterns: Human impacts have depleted >90% of formerly important species, destroyed >65% of seagrass and wetland habitat, degraded water quality, and accelerated species invasions. Twentieth-century conservation efforts achieved partial recovery of upper trophic levels but have so far failed to restore former ecosystem structure and function. Our results provide detailed historical baselines and quantitative targets for ecosystem-based management and marine conservation.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                Microbiol Spectr
                Microbiol Spectr
                spectrum
                Microbiology Spectrum
                American Society for Microbiology (1752 N St., N.W., Washington, DC )
                2165-0497
                May 2024
                12 April 2024
                12 April 2024
                : 12
                : 5
                : e04048-23
                Affiliations
                [1 ]College of Marine Life Sciences, Frontiers Science Center for Deep Ocean Multispheres and Earth System, and Key Lab of Polar Oceanography and Global Ocean Change, Ocean University of China; , Qingdao, China
                [2 ]ECOSYM (Ecologie des systèmes marins côtiers)- UMR 5119, Universite de Montpellier; , Montpellier, France
                [3 ]Laboratorio de Virología, Centro de Neurobiología y Fisiopatología Integrativa, Instituto de Química y Bioquímica, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Valparaíso; , Valparaíso, Chile
                [4 ]Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science; , Baltimore, Maryland, USA
                [5 ]Microbiology Division, Stroud Water Research Center; , Avondale, Arizona, USA
                Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station; , New Haven, Connecticut, USA
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to Feng Chen, chenf@ 123456umces.edu
                Address correspondence to Jinjun Kan, jkan@ 123456stroudcenter.org

                The authors declare no conflict of interest.

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4891-1431
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6064-7805
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5331-380X
                Article
                04048-23 spectrum.04048-23
                10.1128/spectrum.04048-23
                11064499
                38606959
                92dab1bb-c839-4b1b-afc3-c59011311641
                Copyright © 2024 Wang et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

                History
                : 07 December 2023
                : 15 March 2024
                Page count
                supplementary-material: 2, authors: 7, Figures: 7, Tables: 1, References: 112, Pages: 22, Words: 13008
                Funding
                Funded by: National Science Foundation (NSF), FundRef https://doi.org/10.13039/100000001;
                Award ID: MCB-0132070, MCB-0238515, MCB-0537041
                Award Recipient :
                Funded by: MOST | National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC);
                Award ID: 42206147
                Award Recipient :
                Funded by: 山东省科学技术厅 | Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province (山东省自然科学基金);
                Award ID: ZR2022QD046
                Award Recipient :
                Categories
                Research Article
                environmental-microbiology, Environmental Microbiology
                Custom metadata
                May 2024

                planktonic eukaryotes,spatiotemporal variations,abundant and rare taxa,harmful algal species,chesapeake bay

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