Estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communities

Microbial interactions have profound impacts on biodiversity, biogeochemistry, and ecosystem functioning, and yet, they remain poorly understood in the ocean and with respect to changing environmental conditions. We applied hierarchical clustering of an annual 16S and 18S amplicon dataset in the Ski...

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Main Authors: Sean R. Anderson, Elizabeth L. Harvey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2022-09-01
Series:PeerJ
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Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/14005.pdf
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author Sean R. Anderson
Elizabeth L. Harvey
author_facet Sean R. Anderson
Elizabeth L. Harvey
author_sort Sean R. Anderson
collection DOAJ
description Microbial interactions have profound impacts on biodiversity, biogeochemistry, and ecosystem functioning, and yet, they remain poorly understood in the ocean and with respect to changing environmental conditions. We applied hierarchical clustering of an annual 16S and 18S amplicon dataset in the Skidaway River Estuary, which revealed two similar clusters for prokaryotes (Bacteria and Archaea) and protists: Cluster 1 (March-May and November-February) and Cluster 2 (June-October). We constructed co-occurrence networks from each cluster to explore how microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct periods in the estuary. Cluster 1 communities were exposed to significantly lower temperature, sunlight, NO3, and SiO4; only NH4 was higher at this time. Several network properties (e.g., edge number, degree, and centrality) were elevated for networks constructed with Cluster 1 vs. 2 samples. There was also evidence that microbial nodes in Cluster 1 were more connected (e.g., higher edge density and lower path length) compared to Cluster 2, though opposite trends were observed when networks considered Prokaryote-Protist edges only. The number of Prokaryote-Prokaryote and Prokaryote-Protist edges increased by >100% in the Cluster 1 network, mainly involving Flavobacteriales, Rhodobacterales, Peridiniales, and Cryptomonadales associated with each other and other microbial groups (e.g., SAR11, Bacillariophyta, and Strombidiida). Several Protist-Protist associations, including Bacillariophyta correlated with Syndiniales (Dino-Groups I and II) and an Unassigned Dinophyceae group, were more prevalent in Cluster 2. Based on the type and sign of associations that increased in Cluster 1, our findings indicate that mutualistic, competitive, or predatory relationships may have been more representative among microbes when conditions were less favorable in the estuary; however, such relationships require further exploration and validation in the field and lab. Coastal networks may also be driven by shifts in the abundance of certain taxonomic or functional groups. Sustained monitoring of microbial communities over environmental gradients, both spatial and temporal, is critical to predict microbial dynamics and biogeochemistry in future marine ecosystems.
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spelling doaj.art-8235ffe6be274edcad7fb0c45bdd1ecc2023-12-03T06:51:10ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592022-09-0110e1400510.7717/peerj.14005Estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communitiesSean R. Anderson0Elizabeth L. Harvey1Northern Gulf Institute, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS, United States of AmericaDepartment of Biological Sciences, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, United States of AmericaMicrobial interactions have profound impacts on biodiversity, biogeochemistry, and ecosystem functioning, and yet, they remain poorly understood in the ocean and with respect to changing environmental conditions. We applied hierarchical clustering of an annual 16S and 18S amplicon dataset in the Skidaway River Estuary, which revealed two similar clusters for prokaryotes (Bacteria and Archaea) and protists: Cluster 1 (March-May and November-February) and Cluster 2 (June-October). We constructed co-occurrence networks from each cluster to explore how microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct periods in the estuary. Cluster 1 communities were exposed to significantly lower temperature, sunlight, NO3, and SiO4; only NH4 was higher at this time. Several network properties (e.g., edge number, degree, and centrality) were elevated for networks constructed with Cluster 1 vs. 2 samples. There was also evidence that microbial nodes in Cluster 1 were more connected (e.g., higher edge density and lower path length) compared to Cluster 2, though opposite trends were observed when networks considered Prokaryote-Protist edges only. The number of Prokaryote-Prokaryote and Prokaryote-Protist edges increased by >100% in the Cluster 1 network, mainly involving Flavobacteriales, Rhodobacterales, Peridiniales, and Cryptomonadales associated with each other and other microbial groups (e.g., SAR11, Bacillariophyta, and Strombidiida). Several Protist-Protist associations, including Bacillariophyta correlated with Syndiniales (Dino-Groups I and II) and an Unassigned Dinophyceae group, were more prevalent in Cluster 2. Based on the type and sign of associations that increased in Cluster 1, our findings indicate that mutualistic, competitive, or predatory relationships may have been more representative among microbes when conditions were less favorable in the estuary; however, such relationships require further exploration and validation in the field and lab. Coastal networks may also be driven by shifts in the abundance of certain taxonomic or functional groups. Sustained monitoring of microbial communities over environmental gradients, both spatial and temporal, is critical to predict microbial dynamics and biogeochemistry in future marine ecosystems.https://peerj.com/articles/14005.pdfMicrobesRelationshipsNetworksEstuariesTemperatureNutrients
spellingShingle Sean R. Anderson
Elizabeth L. Harvey
Estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communities
PeerJ
Microbes
Relationships
Networks
Estuaries
Temperature
Nutrients
title Estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communities
title_full Estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communities
title_fullStr Estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communities
title_full_unstemmed Estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communities
title_short Estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communities
title_sort estuarine microbial networks and relationships vary between environmentally distinct communities
topic Microbes
Relationships
Networks
Estuaries
Temperature
Nutrients
url https://peerj.com/articles/14005.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT seanranderson estuarinemicrobialnetworksandrelationshipsvarybetweenenvironmentallydistinctcommunities
AT elizabethlharvey estuarinemicrobialnetworksandrelationshipsvarybetweenenvironmentallydistinctcommunities