Microbial utilization of nitrogen in cold core eddies: size does matter

Allison McInnes1, Lauren Frances Messer1, Leonardo Laiolo1, Bonnie Laverock1, Olivier Laczka1, Mark Vincent Brown2, Justin Seymour3 and Martina Doblin4, (1)University of Technology Sydney, C3 – Plant Functional Biology and Climate Change Cluster, Sydney, Australia, Australia, (2)University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, (3)University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia, (4)University of Technology Sydney, Ultimo, Australia
Abstract:
As the base of the marine food web, and the first step in the biological carbon pump, understanding changes in microbial community composition is essential for predicting changes in the marine nitrogen (N) cycle. Climate change projections suggest that oligotrophic waters will become more stratified with a concomitant shift in microbial community composition based on changes in N supply. In regions of strong boundary currents, eddies could reduce this limitation through nutrient uplift and other forms of eddy mixing. Understanding the preference for different forms of N by microbes is essential for understanding and predicting shifts in the microbial community. This study aims to understand the utilization of different N species within different microbial size fractions as well as understand the preferred source of N to these groups across varying mesoscale and sub-mesoscale features in the East Australian Current (EAC). In June 2015 we sampled microbial communities from three depths (surface, chlorophyll-a maximum and below the mixed layer), in three mesoscale and sub-mesoscale eddy features, as well as two end-point water masses (coastal and oligotrophic EAC water). Particulate matter was analysed for stable C and N isotopes, and seawater incubations with trace amounts of 15NO3, 15NH4, 15N2, 15Urea and 13C were undertaken. All samples were size fractionated into 0.3-2.0 µm, 2.0-10 µm, and >10 µm size classes, encompassing the majority of microbes in these waters. Microbial community composition was also assessed (pigments, flow cytometry, DNA), as well as physical and chemical parameters, to better understand the drivers of carbon fixation and nitrogen utilization across a diversity of water masses and microbial size classes. We observed that small, young features have a greater abundance of larger size classes. We therefore predict that these microbes will preferentially draw down the recently pulsed NO3. Ultimately, the size and age of a feature will determine the N compound utilization and microbial community composition and as the feature grows in size and age a community succession will lead to differential more diverse N compound utilization.