4 research outputs found

    Mare Incognitum: A Glimpse into Future Plankton Diversity and Ecology Research

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    Chust, Guillem ... et al.-- 9 pages, 1 figure.-- Corrigendum: Mare Incognitum: A Glimpse into Future Plankton Diversity and Ecology Research, Frontiers in Marine Science 4: 122 (2017) https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2017.00122With global climate change altering marine ecosystems, research on plankton ecology is likely to navigate uncharted seas. Yet, a staggering wealth of new plankton observations, integrated with recent advances in marine ecosystem modeling, may shed light on marine ecosystem structure and functioning. A EuroMarine foresight workshop on the “Impact of climate change on the distribution of plankton functional and phylogenetic diversity” (PlankDiv) identified five grand challenges for future plankton diversity and macroecology research: (1) What can we learn about plankton communities from the new wealth of high-throughput “omics” data? (2) What is the link between plankton diversity and ecosystem function? (3) How can species distribution models be adapted to represent plankton biogeography? (4) How will plankton biogeography be altered due to anthropogenic climate change? and (5) Can a new unifying theory of macroecology be developed based on plankton ecology studies? In this review, we discuss potential future avenues to address these questions, and challenges that need to be tackled along the wayThis research was funded by the EuroMarine Network (http://www.euromarinenetwork.eu), through the organization of the PlankDiv EuroMarine Foresight workshop, held at the Observatoire Océanographique de Villefranche-sur-mer, Villefranche-sur-mer, France, in March 2016, and cofounded by the Basque Government (Department Deputy of Agriculture, Fishing and Food Policy). The PlankDiv workshop was also supported by the Laboratoire d'Océanographie de Villefranche-sur-mer (LOV, UPMC/CNRS), the PlankMed action of WP5 MERMEX/MISTRAL, and by the French national programme EC2CO-LEFE (FunOmics project).Peer Reviewe

    Seasonal dynamics of phytoplankton community assembly at the Blanes Bay Microbial Observatory (BBMO), NW Mediterranean Sea

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    28 pages, 23 figures, 2 tables, 1 appendix.-- Data availability: Data will be made available on requestThe dynamics of phytoplankton biomass and community composition is important for the functioning of marine ecosystems and ocean biogeochemical cycles. However, there is a shortage of studies addressing the interannual seasonal patterns of phytoplankton community assembly due to sampling limitations. Here we study the seasonal dynamics of eight major phytoplankton groups over a 12 year period (2006 to 2018) using a time-series of taxonomic composition from the Blanes Bay Microbial Observatory (BBMO) in the North Western Mediterranean Sea: dinoflagellates, diatoms, coccolithophores, Prochlorococcus, Synechococcus, picoeukaryotes, nanoeukaryotes, and photosynthetic nanoflagellates. We combine the analysis of biotic factors (primary production, phytoplankton taxa, cell abundance, cell size, chlorophyll-a concentration, and phytoplankton biomass) and abiotic factors (nutrients, temperature, and irradiance) to provide a coherent picture of the observed seasonal patterns of phytoplankton community assembly. The BBMO ecosystem is seasonally heterogeneous in community composition, displaying large fluctuating alternations in phytoplankton group dominance throughout the year. The seasonal succession of phytoplankton groups tends to repeat itself every year in a regular fashion, being the seasonal variability of the phytoplankton groups larger than their interannual variability. We compute -diversity, a measure of the effective richness of phytoplankton groups. The seasonality of -diversity shows that it is lowest during winter and highest during summer. We compute temporal -diversity, a measure of compositional heterogeneity of the phytoplankton community. The data show a sinusoidal behavior of -diversity as a function of the temporal distance between samples, with a period of one year. We use the mirror index (1 - -diversity) at a temporal distance of one month to compute the phytoplankton group turnover. The seasonality of turnover shows that it is highest during spring and autumn. To evaluate the validity of niche and neutral theories in predicting the interannual sinusoidal behavior of -diversity, we performed numerical simulations using a mechanistic model. The results provide support to the niche theory for marine phytoplankton ecology and community assembly. The phytoplankton groups appear to follow their specific ecological niches, tracking the seasonal changes in environmental conditions. The ecological implications of these findings are that marine phytoplankton groups appear to fill distinct environmental niches and thus may have different functional roles in the ecosystem. Furthermore, they may be predictable using both mechanistic and species distribution modeling approaches. The climatological time-series presented here can be an excellent testing ground for evaluating the performance of these marine ecosystem models having an explicit representation of different phytoplankton groupsThis work was funded by national research grant MARES (CGL2013-41256-P) from the Spanish government to S.M.V. [...] C.G. was supported by a PhD fellowship grant within the MARES project. The Institute of Marine Sciences (CSIC) received funding from the Spanish government through the «Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence» award (CEX2019-000928-S)Peer reviewe

    Mare Incognitum: A Glimpse into Future Plankton Diversity and Ecology Research

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    With global climate change altering marine ecosystems, research on plankton ecology is likely to navigate uncharted seas. Yet, a staggering wealth of new plankton observations, integrated with recent advances in marine ecosystem modeling, may shed light on marine ecosystem structure and functioning. A EuroMarine foresight workshop on the “Impact of climate change on the distribution of plankton functional and phylogenetic diversity” (PlankDiv) identified five grand challenges for future plankton diversity and macroecology research: (1) What can we learn about plankton communities from the new wealth of high-throughput “omics” data? (2) What is the link between plankton diversity and ecosystem function? (3) How can species distribution models be adapted to represent plankton biogeography? (4) How will plankton biogeography be altered due to anthropogenic climate change? and (5) Can a new unifying theory of macroecology be developed based on plankton ecology studies? In this review, we discuss potential future avenues to address these questions, and challenges that need to be tackled along the way
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