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Pan-Arctic plankton community structure and its global connectivity

Authors :
Ibarbalz, Federico M.
Henry, Nicolas
Mahe, Frédéric
Ardyna, Mathieu
Zingone, Adriana
Scalco, Eleonora
Lovejoy, Thomas E.
Lombard, Fabien
Jaillon, Olivier
Iudicone, Daniele
Malviya, Shruti
Sullivan, Matthew B.
Chaffron, Samuel
Karsenti, Eric
Babin, Marcel
Boss, Emmanuel
Wincker, Patrick
Zinger, Lucie
de Vargas, Colomban
Bowler, Chris
Karp-Boss, Lee
Ibarbalz, Federico M.
Henry, Nicolas
Mahe, Frédéric
Ardyna, Mathieu
Zingone, Adriana
Scalco, Eleonora
Lovejoy, Thomas E.
Lombard, Fabien
Jaillon, Olivier
Iudicone, Daniele
Malviya, Shruti
Sullivan, Matthew B.
Chaffron, Samuel
Karsenti, Eric
Babin, Marcel
Boss, Emmanuel
Wincker, Patrick
Zinger, Lucie
de Vargas, Colomban
Bowler, Chris
Karp-Boss, Lee
Source :
Elementa
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Arctic Ocean (AO) is being rapidly transformed by global warming, but its biodiversity remains understudied for many planktonic organisms, in particular for unicellular eukaryotes that play pivotal roles in marine food webs and biogeochemical cycles. The aim of this study was to characterize the biogeographic ranges of species that comprise the contemporary pool of unicellular eukaryotes in the AO as a first step toward understanding mechanisms that structure these communities and identifying potential target species for monitoring. Leveraging the Tara Oceans DNA metabarcoding data, we mapped the global distributions of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) found on Arctic shelves into five biogeographic categories, identified biogeographic indicators, and inferred the degree to which AO communities of unicellular eukaryotes share members with assemblages from lower latitudes. Arctic/Polar indicator OTUs, as well as some globally ubiquitous OTUs, dominated the detection and abundance of DNA reads in the Arctic samples. OTUs detected only in Arctic samples (Arctic-exclusives) showed restricted distribution with relatively low abundances, accounting for 10–16% of the total Arctic OTU pool. OTUs with high abundances in tropical and/or temperate latitudes (non-Polar indicators) were also found in the AO but mainly at its periphery. We observed a large change in community taxonomic composition across the Atlantic-Arctic continuum, supporting the idea that advection and environmental filtering are important processes that shape plankton assemblages in the AO. Altogether, this study highlights the connectivity between the AO and other oceans, and provides a framework for monitoring and assessing future changes in this vulnerable ecosystem.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Elementa
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391321370
Document Type :
Electronic Resource