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International Workshop The microbial view of marine biogeochemical cycles 19-21 May 2010 Banyuls-sur-Mer, France Organised by the Laboratoire d’Océanographie Microbienne (LOMIC) Supported by Observatoire Océanologique de Banyuls (OOB) Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris6) Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) Scientific Committee: Ingrid Obernosterer (Chair), Laboratoire d’Océanographie Microbienne, Banyuls, France Josep Gasol, Institut de Ciències del Mar, CSIC, Barcelona, Spain Gerhard Herndl, Dept. of Marine Biology, Univ. of Vienna, Austria David Kirchman, School of Marine Science and Policy, Univ. of Delaware, Lewes, USA Mary Ann Moran, Dept. of Marine Sciences, Univ. of Georgia, Athens, USA Jarone Pinhassi, School of Pure and Applied Natural Sciences, Univ. of Kalmar, Sweden Marcelino Suzuki, Laboratoire d’Océanographie Microbienne, Banyuls, France Foreword Over the past two decades, a suite of culture-independent molecular based techniques has allowed us to determine microbial community composition at different phylogenetic levels in the ocean. These techniques have given insight into the dominant microbial groups present at varying temporal and spatial scales. More recent high throughput approaches such as pyrosequencing have the potential to reveal the so-called “rare biosphere” of microbial communities and thus to nearly unlock what we once considered a black box. However, the functional role of individual microbial groups in biogeochemical cycles remains thus far poorly understood. Single-cell analysis and quantitative determination of particular genes and their expression are presently the most common approaches to link microbial community structure to function. The extraordinary advances in (meta)genomics, (meta)transcriptomics, and (meta)proteomics present additional new approaches that have the potential to provide detailed insight into the metabolic capabilities and thus functional roles of natural microbial communities. Together, these techniques offer us the possibility to address questions at different phylogenetic levels, from natural microbial communities to strains with entirely sequenced genomes. The objective of this workshop is to discuss how these various approaches can contribute to address major, but thus far unresolved issues in marine biogeochemistry. Focus will be put on the questions “What level of phylogenetic diversity is an appropriate target if we are to better understand the functional role of microbes in marine biogeochemical cycles?” and “How can we integrate the “-omics” sciences to investigate functional groups in relationship to biogeochemical cycles?” Sixty-four aquatic microbial ecologists, marine biogeochemists and molecular biologists from 14 countries will be present during this meeting. The 32 oral and 22 poster presentations will discuss the link between microbial diversity, metabolism and function, and marine biogeochemical cycles of various elements. Ingrid Obernosterer Banyuls-sur-mer, May 3 2010 Workshop Program WEDNESDAY, MAY 19 14:00h Welcome and Introduction by Ingrid Obernosterer 14:30h-15:00h Keynote Lecture by David Kirchman: Community structure and function of heterotrophic bacteria in the oceanic carbon cycle 15:00h-15:30h Keynote Lecture by Jarone Pinhassi: Ecological roles of proteorhodopsin phototrophy in marine bacteria Session 1 Bacterial metabolism and solar radiation Chairs: D. Kirchman and J. Pinhassi Lami R., N.J. West, P. Lebaron and D.L. Kirchman : Distribution and expression of SAR11 proteorhodopsins Jeffrey W.H., J.D. Pakulski, A.J. Baldwin, J.P. Kase, J.A. Moss, F. Joux, and P.J. Neale: Spatial patterns of light stimulated bacterial heterotrophic production 16:10-16-40h Coffee Break Session 1 Bacterial metabolism and solar radiation Vila-Costa M., S. Sharma, M.A. Moran and E.O. Casamayor.: Comparison of diel gene expression profiles in an oligotrophic high-altitude lake and two marine systems through metranscriptomics Cottrell M., L. Fauteux, P.A. del Giorgio and D. Kirchman: Photoheterotrophy in Quebec lakes Session 2 The Fe- and DMS-cycles Chairs: D. Kirchman and J. Pinhassi Green D., S. Amin, M. Hart, W. Sunda, F. Küpper and C. Carrano: Bacterial-algal mutualism and iron supply Toulza E., A. Tagliabue, L. Bopp, Blain S and G. Piganeau: Can we link metagenome gene content and iron supply in the ocean ? Blain S., A. Devez, M. Fourquez, L. Intertaglia, T. Jouenne, A. Schauman, I. Schalk, V. Goeffroy and I. Obernosterer: Impact of iron limitation on the metabolism and proteom of some marine heterotrophic bacteria Johnston A.W.B., J.D. Todd, A.R.J. Curson, M.J. Sullivan and M. Kirkwood.: The organisms, genes, pathways and regulation of dimethyl sulfide production from dimethylsulfoniopropionate – a surfeit of biodiversity 19:00h Aperitif and Dinner THURSDAY, MAY 20 9:00h-9:30h Keynote Lecture by Mary Ann Moran: A Biogeochemist's Guide to Quantitative Comparative Metatranscriptome Analysis 9:30h-10:00h Keynote Lecture by Gerhard Herndl: Distribution of C and N cycling in the North Atlantic: functional gene abundance versus biogeochemical rate measurements. Session 3 Rare microbes Chairs: M.A. Moran and G. Herndl Lamy D., H. Agogué, P. Neal, M. Sogin and G. Herndl: Bacterial assemblage composition in the North Atlantic Ocean revealed by massively parallel sequencing Galand P.E., E.O. Casamayor, D. Kirchman and C. Lovejoy: Biogeography of the rare Arctic microbes 10:40h-11:00h Coffee Break Session 3 Rare microbes Ghiglione J.-F. and A. Murray: Comparison of massively parallel deep sequencing and molecular profiling to evaluate the seasonal changes in Sub-Antarctic and Antarctic marine bacterioplankton communities Montoya J. Emerging horizons in biodiversity and ecosystem functioning research Session 4 The N-cycle Chairs: M.A. Moran and G. Herndl Sintes E., K. Bergauer, D. De Corte and G.J. Herndl: Archaeal amoA: new insights into the diversity and biogeography of Archaeal ammonia oxidizers Fernández C., L. Farias and O. Ulloa: Anaerobic nitrogen fixation: molecular and biogeochemical approaches Biegala I., A.-F. Deton, S. Bonnet and P. Raimbault.: Importance of diazotrophic picocyanobacteria in marine ecosystem functioning (South-West Pacific) 12:40h-14:00h Lunch break Session 5 Linking bacteria to phytoplankton Chair: I. Obernosterer Simon M., S. Hahnke, H.-A. Giebel, H. Osterholz and T. Brinkhoff: Drivers of organic matter turnover in the sea – some examples from the Roseobacter clade Sarmento H. and J.M. Gasol: Specific phytoplankton – bacteria interactions through dissolved organic carbon Laghdass M., S. Blain, M. Besseling, P. Catala, C. Guieu and I. Obernosterer: Impact of Saharan dust deposition on the bacterial diversity and activity in the NW Mediterranean Sea Giebel H.-A., D. Kalhöfer, S. Voget, T. Brinkhoff and M. Simon: The Roseobacter RCA cluster – its occurrence, diversity and potential significance Ly J., J.C. Kromkamp and K.C. Timmermans: Effects of phosphorus limitation on marine natural phytoplankton community structure and function 15:45h-16:15h Coffee Break 16:15h-18:30h Poster Session 19:00h Workshop Dinner FRIDAY, MAY 21 9:00h-9:30h Keynote Lecture by Josep Gasol: Growth and activity rates of bacterial groups: can we infer generalizations? 9:30h-10:00h Keynote Lecture by Marcelino Suzuki: In situ gene expression by marine bacterioplankton at high phylogenetic resolution 10:00h-10:30h Coffee Break Session 5 Bacterial growth Chairs: J. Gasol and M. Suzuki Koblizek M., O. Prasil and B. van Mooy: How fast do marine bacteria grow? Ferrera I., J.M. Gasol, M. Sebastian, E. Hojerova and M. Koblizek: Manipulation of top-down pressure and its effects on the growth rates of different bacterial functional and phylogenetic groups Teira E., S. Martínez-García, C. Lønborg and X.A. Álvarez-Salgado: Growth rates of different phylogenetic bacterioplankton groups in a coastal upwelling system Session 6 Adaptation and Evolution Chairs: J. Gasol and M. Suzuki Talarmin A., F. VanWambeke, P. Catala, C. Courties and P. Lebaron: Functional diversity of bacterioplankton across the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea assessed by flow cytometry, cell sorting and FISH techniques West N., M. Suzuki and P. Lebaron: A novel clade of Prochlorococcus found in HNLC waters in the South Pacific Ocean Logares R., E. Lindström, S. Langenheder, J. Laybourn-Parry, L. Tranvik, S. Bertilsson and K. Rengefors: Different salinities Influence Microbial Community Composition and evolution in Coastal Antarctic Lakes Poster Session 1-Agogué H., M. Brink, J. Dinasquet and G. J. Herndl: Pronounced latitudinal and vertical gradients of putatively nitrifying Archaea in the dark realm of the North Atlantic 2-Akram N., J. Forsberg, J. M. González and J. Pinhassi: Effect of light on proteorhodopsincontaining marine “heterotrophic” bacteria (Vibrio spp.) 3-Alonso C., N. Musat, M. Kuypers and R. Amann: Incorporation of photosynthetically derived carbon by marine bacteria: first insights into NanoSIMS results 4-Alonso-Sáez L., J. Pinhassi, J. Pernthaler and J.M. Gasol: Leucine-to-carbon empirical conversion factor experiments: a look at the role of bacterial community composition 5-Bergauer K., E. Sintes, J. van Bleijswijk, and G.J. Herndl: Abundance of autotrophic bacteria and archaea in the deep north atlantic determined by q-pcr 6-Boeuf D., M. Cottrell, D. Kirchman, P. Lebaron and C. Jeanthon: Abundance and Diversity of Aerobic Anoxygenic Phototrophic Bacteria in the Beaufort Sea 7-Brauer V. S., de Jonge V. N., Buma A. G. J. and F. J. Weissing: Is the distribution of marine nitrogen fixation related to temperature? 8-Boutrif M., M. Garel, C. Panagiotopoulos and C. Tamburini: Pressure Effect on the degradation of Marine Extracellular Polymeric Substances by Deep Sea prokaryotes at the DYFAMED site (NW Mediterranean Sea) 9-Coll-Lladó M., S.G. Acinas and C. Pedrós-Alió: Transcriptome Fingerprinting: an approach to explore gene expression patterns in marine microbial communities 10-Díez-Vives C. , J.M. Gasol, B. Díez, V. Balagué, T. Pommier, C. Pedrós-Alió and S.G. Acinas: insights on diversity and dynamics of bacteroidetes co-existing populations in the northwestern mediterranean sea 11-Fourquez M., P. Catala, I. Obernosterer and S. Blain: IRON bioavailability for marine bacteria: a single cell approach 12-Gledhill M., E. Mawji, A. Milton, G. Tarran, M. V. Zubkov, G. Wolff, A. Thompson, and E. P. Achterberg: Production and occurrence of siderophores along AMT transects 13-Grim S., B. J. Campbell and D. L. Kirchman: Actively replicating bacteria in the MidAtlantic Bight and Sargasso Sea 14-Lai C.-C. J. and F.-K. Shiah: Temperature effects on variation of community respiration 15-Landa M., Blain, S., Batailler N., Caparros J., Catala P., Devez, A., Laghdass, M. Oriol, L. and I. Obernosterer: Bioavailability of dissolved organic matter and bacterial diversity: Insights from chemostat culture experiments 16-Lin C.H. M., F.-K. Shiah and T.-Y. Ho: Seasonal succession of phytoplankton composition in Fei-Tsui reservoir 17-Manes C-L. de O., N.J. West, S. Rapenne and P. Lebaron: Dynamic bacterial communities on reverse-osmosis membranes in a full-scale desalination plant 18-Molina V., C. Fernandez and L. Farias: Ammonium and nitrite oxidation (de) coupling in the euphotic zone 19-Nielsdottir M. C., T. S. Bibby, C. M. Moore, R. Sanders, D. J. Hinz, R. Korb, M. Whitehouse and E. P. Achterberg The seasonal variation of iron stress in the Scotia Sea 20-Rowan K., S.T. Wilson, M.C. Hart, D. H. Green, and A. D. Hatton: The role of faecal pellet micro-environments in oceanic methane production 21-Salter I., R.S. Lampitt, A.E.S.Kemp, G.A. Wolff, C.M. Moore, J. Holtvoeth and M.T. Hernandez-Sanchez: Diatom flux assemblages from a naturally iron fertilized bloom: Implications for carbon cycling in the present day and glacial ocean 22-Varela M.M., V. Balagué, A. Bode, A. Calvo-Díaz, Á. Cid, J. Gasol, E. Marañón and X.Á. G. Morán: Bacterial assemblage structure and carbon metabolism across an Atlantic latitudinal transect PRONOUNCED LATITUDINAL AND VERTICAL GRADIENTS ARCHAEA IN THE DARK REALM OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC OF IN PUTATIVELY NITRIFYING AGOGUÉ H.1,2, M. BRINK1, J. DINASQUET1 AND G. J. HERNDL1, 3 1 Department of Biological Oceanography, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), PO BOX 59, 1790 AB Den Burg, Netherlands 2 Institut du Littoral et de l’Environnement, UMR LIENSs 6250, CNRS-Université de la Rochelle, France 3 Department of Marine Biology, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Vienna, Austria Aerobic nitrification of ammonia to nitrite and nitrate is one of the major bioelemental transformations in the sea. Catalyzed by the enzyme ammonia monooxygenase, the ability to oxidize ammonia, was though until recently, to be driven only by few members of Bacteria. The recent isolation of ammonia oxidizing Crenarchaeota Nitrosopumilus maritimus revealed the existence of ammonia monooxygenase genes in mesophilic Archaea. Since then, evidence accumulated that marine Crenarchaeota, the most abundant group of Archaea in pelagic waters, are capable of ammonia oxidation. To determine the distribution of ammonia monooxygenase subunit A (amoA) gene copy numbers from the surface to the bathypelagic layers of the North Atlantic water column (from 63°N to 5°S), the abundance of 16S rRNA genes and archaeal and bacterial amoA genes were determined. The analyses revealed that the abundance of the gene encoding for the archaeal amoA is decreasing drastically with depth especially in the eastern subtropical Atlantic. This coincides with the lower nutrient concentration of the deep waters in the southern parts of the North Atlantic and the older age of the deep-water masses there. Our data demonstrate that the activity of the Crenarchaeota is closely linked to the major water masses of the North Atlantic and does not just follow depth-related trends and that most bathypelagic Crenarchaeota are not autotrophic ammonia oxidizers: most likely, they utilize organic matter and hence live heterotrophically. EFFECT OF LIGHT ON PROTEORHODOPSIN-CONTAINING BACTERIA (VIBRIO SPP.) MARINE “HETEROTROPHIC” AKRAM N.1, J. FORSBERG1, J. M. GONZÁLEZ2 AND J. PINHASSI1 1 Marine Microbiology, School of Natural Sciences, Linnaeus University, 9182 Kalmar, Sweden Departamento de Microbiologia y Biologia Celular, Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de La Laguna, 38206 La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain 2 Proteorhodopsin caught hold of the marine scientific community’s imagination and attention back in year 2000 when metagenomic analysis of bacterioplankton community samples showed these photoproteins to be ubiquitously distributed throughout the world oceans. But the mysteries surrounding this tantalizing protein have not been fully unveiled – most notably, no single ecological role has been possible to assign to proteorhodopsin and it has been proposed to have ‘an array of physiological roles’. This is in stark contrast to the relatively well characterized biochemistry of the proteorhodopsin molecule itself. Nevertheless, research the last few years has provided a few glimpses about the role of light for stimulating e.g. growth, gene expression and anaplerotic carbon dioxide fixation in proteorhodopsin-containing bacteria. Our study is an attempt to decipher the ecological role of phototrophy in members of the marine genus Vibrio, consisting of heterotrophic bacteria of which some only recently were discovered to have the potential for phototrophy. Survival of Vibrio sp. AND4 cells harvested from exponential or mid-stationary phases was investigated under light and dark conditions. Light-stimulated survival of cells only from stationary phase indicated regulation of proteorhodopsin gene expression through different growth phases, rather than constitutive expression. Screening of Vibrio isolates revealed proteorhodopsin also in another marine strain, SCB39, although this isolate reacted differently to light. These results indicate that proteorhodopsins even in very closely related species may have different ecological roles. INCORPORATION OF PHOTOSYNTHETICALLY INSIGHTS INTO NANOSIMS RESULTS DERIVED CARBON BY MARINE BACTERIA: FIRST ALONSO C.1, N. MUSAT2, M. KUYPERS2 AND R. AMANN2 1 2 Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas Clemente Estable, Montevideo, Uruguay Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Bremen, Germany The Río de la Plata estuary, situated between Argentina and Uruguay, is the world’s largest estuary. This system, besides entailing a highly productive area, is particularly relevant for the global carbon budget, acting as a CO2 sink, especially during spring and summer. Thus, it is a particularly appealing ecosystem for studying the role of major bacterial groups in the carbon cycle. In this work, an experiment was performed by adding 13C labeled bicarbonate to whole water samples. Incubations were run for 24 hours at in situ temperature and light conditions. Samples were taken after 2, 4, 8, 12 and 24 hours of incubation for analysis of the 13C incorporation into bacterial cells using NanoSIMS. Alphaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria and Bacteroidetes, the three major bacterial groups present in the samples, were identified by halogen in situ hybridization (HISH) with rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes. Preliminary results indicate that both, the percentage of Bacteroidetes cells enriched in 13C and the enrichment factor increased with incubation time, achieving their maximum after 24 h. On the contrary, the proportion of alphaproteobacterial cells enriched in 13C and their corresponding enrichment factor decreased along incubation time. A high proportion (>60%) of cells in all three groups were 13C enriched after 24 h of incubation; the highest value was found among Bacteroidetes (85%). After 24 hours of incubation Bacteroidetes and Gammaproteobacteria exhibited very similar average values for the factor of enrichment, while Alphaproteobacteria exhibited much lower values. In summary, the major bacterial groups of the Río de la Plata estuary exhibited different incorporation patterns of photosynthetically derived products. Given the pronounced differences in the distribution of these groups along this system, this could have impacts on the functioning of the carbon cycle in the different portions of the estuary. LEUCINE-TO-CARBON EMPIRICAL CONVERSION FACTOR EXPERIMENTS : A LOOK AT THE ROLE OF BACTERIAL COMMUNITY COMPOSITION ALONSO-SÁEZ L.1,2, J. PINHASSI3, J. PERNTHALER4 AND J. M. GASOL1 1 Departament de Biologia Marina i Oceanografia, Institut de Ciències del Mar, CSIC, Spain Centro oceanográfico de Gijón, Instituto Español de Oceanografía, Spain 3 Marine Microbiology, School of Natural Sciences, Linnaeus University, Kalmar, Sweden 4 Limnological station, Institute of Plant biology, University of Zurich, Switzerland 2 The suitability of applying empirical conversion factors (eCFs) to determine bacterial biomass production remains unclear because seawater cultures (SWCs) are usually overtaken by phylotypes that are not abundant in situ. While eCFs vary across environments, it has not been tested whether differences in eCFs are driven by changes in bacterial community composition (BCC) or by in situ environmental conditions. We carried out SWCs throughout a year to analyse the correlation between eCFs and BCC, analysed by catalyzed reporter deposition fluorescence in situ hybridization. Gammaproteobacteria usually dominated SWCs, but their abundance exhibited a wide range (25-73% of cell counts) and significantly increased with inorganic nutrient enrichment. Bacteroidetes were less abundant but increased up to 40% of cells counts in winter SWCs, when in situ chlorophyll a was high. The correlations between eCFs and the abundance of the main broad phylogenetic groups (Gamma-, Alphaproteobacteria and Bacteroidetes) were significant, albeit weak, while more specific groups (Alteromonadaceae and Rhodobacteraceae) were not significantly correlated. Our results show that the frequent development of the fast-growing group Alteromonadaceae in SWCs does not strongly drive variations in eCFs. Rather, the results imply that there is an interconexion between environmental conditions and the growth of specific phylotypes in determining eCFs. ABUNDANCE OF AUTOTROPHIC BACTERIA AND ARCHAEA IN THE DEEP NORTH ATLANTIC DETERMINED BY Q-PCR BERGAUER K.1, E. SINTES2, J. VAN BLEIJSWIJK2 AND G.J. HERNDL1,2 1 University of Vienna, Ecology Center, Dept. of Marine Biology, A-1090 Vienna, Austria Dept. of Biological Oceanography, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), 1790AB Den Burg, The Netherlands 2 Prokaryotes are the main players in the biogeochemical carbon cycling in aquatic ecosystems. Apart from the Calvin-Bassham-Benson cycle as prevalent autotrophic pathway in Bacteria and eukaryotes, four alternative metabolic mechanisms of CO2 fixation are found exclusively in prokaryotes. We aimed at determining the relative abundance of chemoautotrophic Archaea and Bacteria in the meso- and bathypelagic ocean and link the gene abundance indicative for chemoautrotrophy to inorganic carbon fixation in the dark. For developing suitable primer sets for quantitative PCR (Q-PCR) on the prokaryotic autotrophy, we focused on acetyl CoA carboxylase (ACCase), a key enzyme participating inter alia in the 3-hydroxypropionate/malyl-CoA and its modified 3-hydroxypropionate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle. Hence the oligonucleotide primers target the respective encoding accC gene. Besides its catalytic function in autotrophic pathways, the enzyme ACCase is a mediator in the biosynthesis of fatty acids and therefore ubiquitously distributed in a wide range of organisms. However, due to the lack of fatty acids in archaeal lipids, the enzyme is supposed to function in other metabolic pathways, potentially allowing to determine the proportional contribution of Archaea and Bacteria to overall microbial production in the pelagic realm. Q-PCR with these sets of primers was applied to samples from the Arctic Sea and the North Atlantic and related to bacterial and archaeal amoA copy numbers and inorganic carbon uptake rates. The number of accC gene copy numbers decreased from the oxygen minimum layer to the lower mesopelagic layer in the North Atlantic and remained fairly constant throughout the water column in the Arctic. Based on our results with the newly developed primers, we conclude that deep ocean prokaryotes might have a larger potential of autotrophy than assumed hitherto. IMPORTANCE OF DIAZOTROPHIC PICOCYANOBACTERIA FUNCTIONING (SOUTH-WEST PACIFIC) IN MARINE ECOSYSTEM BIEGALA I.C.1, A.-F. DETON1, S. BONNET2 AND P. RAIMBAULT3 1 Laboratoire d’Océanographie et de Biogéochimie, UMR 6535 LOPB, Centre d’Océanologie de Marseille, rue de la Batterie des Lions, 13007 Marseille, France 2 Laboratoire d’Océanographie et de Biogéochimie, UMR 6535 LOPB, Centre d’Océanologie de Marseille, Campus de Luminy case 901, Cedex 9, 13288 Marseille, France 3 Laboratoire de Microbiologie Géochimie et Ecologie Marine, UMR 6117, Campus de Luminy case 901, Cedex 9, 13288 Marseille, France It is now more and more recognized that the unicellular diazotrophic cyanobacteria play an important role in marine nitrogen and carbon cycles, although these organisms are still not taken into account in global biogeochemical budgets and models. In this study we quantified unicellular diazotrophic cyanobacteria (UCYN2-FIX lineage) using specific whole cell hybridization technique (TSA-FISH) within picoplanktonic, nanoplanctonic and larger size fractions. Surprisingly a significant population of diazotrophic pico-cyanobacteria was discovered in every size fractions and over a large range of nutrient concentrations. These diazotrophs were numerically dominating the UCYN2-FIX community at 97% and 98% in coastal and oceanic environments respectively. In these environments N2-fixation from the < 10 µm size fraction contributed to 74% of total nitrogen fixation. Along the oceanic equatorial transect diazotrophy could explain from 2% to 22% of N source in the Pacific HNLC and oligotrophic warm pool waters, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis were done on 16SrRNA with specific UCYN2-FIX primers and confirmed the targeted picocyanobacteria belong to Group-A from the UCYN2-FIX community. Although most of the diazotrophic picocyanobacteria were free living a third of them were either associated to particles or intracellular of non-thecate dinoflagellates. These associations were mainly observed in nutrient rich environment where particulate organic matters were highly concentrated. In these rich environments (urbanized coastline or equatorial upwelling) diazotrophic picocyanobacteria were either passively trapped on inert particles or may be chemically attracted towards these microenvironments which can provide essential nutrient for growth. The frequent association with non-thecate dinoflagellates reveal either a recent ingestion, or more probably symbiotic associations. Further work should be done to characterize better these associations. ABUNDANCE AND DIVERSITY OF AEROBIC ANOXYGENIC PHOTOTROPHIC BACTERIA IN THE BEAUFORT SEA BOEUF D.1,2, M. COTTRELL3, D. KIRCHMAN3, P. LEBARON4,5 AND C. JEANTHON1,2 1 UPMC Univ Paris VI, UMR 7144, Station Biologique, BP 74, 29682 Roscoff, France CNRS, UMR 7144, Groupe Plancton Océanique, Station Biologique, BP 74, 29682 Roscoff, France 3 School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Lewes, Delaware 19958, USA 4 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 5 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 2 Photoheterotrophy, which is the ability to utilize organic substrates and harvest light energy, occurs in a broad range of microbes, including aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria (AAPB), proteorhodopsin-containing bacteria (PRB), and cyanobacteria. The hybrid metabolism of photoheterotrophs (respiration and phototrophy) will probably make them key players in the Arctic ocean where solar radiation increases in the aquatic environment due to a decrease in summer ice cover. Abundance of cyanobacteria in Arctic waters is generally low and little is known about the abundance and diversity of AAPB and PRB. To give new insights into the ecological significance of the latter functional groups in Arctic waters, we conducted an extensive study in the MacKenzie river/Beaufort Sea system in August 2009 onboard the Canadian research icebreaker Amundsen. We first analyze the abundance and diversity of AAPB using infrared epifluorescence microscopy and cultural and molecular approaches, respectively. Very low relative abundances of AAPB were generally recorded across the transect covering the North Pacific waters, the Bering and Beaufort Seas (< 1% of the total prokaryotic community). The highest contributions of AAPB were obtained in samples subjected to Arctic rivers and the MacKenzie plume (between 6% to 14.2% of the total prokaryotes). A low cultural diversity was observed among our 145 AAPB isolates screened using T-RFLP. The 16S rRNA sequences of the different T-RFLP groups are being sequenced and their phylogenetic diversity will be presented. The molecular diversity of AAPB is actually analyzed by comparing TTGE profiles of the pufM gene, involved in bacteriochlorophyll (BChl a) synthesis, and sequencing of pufM clone libraries. Amplifications were obtained only in samples that yielded the highest cellular abundances, suggesting that AAPB are dominated by freshwater ecotypes. Sequencing of pufM gene libraries is underway to test this hypothesis. I MPACT OF IRON LIMITATION ON THE METABOLISM AND PROTEOM OF SOME MARINE HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA BLAIN S. 1,2, A. DEVEZ1,2, M. FOURQUEZ1,2, L. INTERTAGLIA1,3, T. JOUENNE4, A. SCHAUMAN4, I. SCHALK5, V. GOEFFROY5 AND I. OBERNOSTERER1,2 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 4 CNRS, UMR 6270, Université de Rouen, F-76821 Mont-Saint-Aignan, Cedex, France 5 CNRS-Université de Strasbourg, FRE3211, ESBS, Illkirch, France Iron limitation of phytoplankton in vast areas of the ocean is now well documented, but the case of heterotrophic bacteria remains less explored and puzzling. For example, in High Nutrient Low Chlorophyll regions, previous studies report contradictory results indicating that iron or carbon might be the proximate factor of control. The aim of our study was to get new insights into this issue. We examined how iron limitation impacts major bacterial processes (e.g. growth, respiration) and related biogeochemical properties (e.g. bacterial growth efficiency) of three different strains belonging to Gammaproteobacteria. A mechanistic basis for the understanding of these observations is provided by the comparative analysis of the total proteomes of these strains grown under iron-deficient and ironlimited conditions, and the comparison of bulk parameters (e.g. elemental quota, biovolumes) for ironlimited and non- limited cells. P RESSURE E FFECT ON THE DEGRADATION OF M ARINE E XTRACELLULAR POLYMERIC SUBSTANCES BY DEEP SEA PROKARYOTES AT THE DYFAMED SITE (NW MEDITERRANEAN SEA) BOUTRIF M., M. GAREL, C. PANAGIOTOPOULOS AND C. TAMBURINI Université de la Méditerranée, Centre d'Océanologie de Marseille, LMGEM UMR 6117 CNRS – INSU, Campus de Luminy, Case 901, 13288 Marseille, Cedex 9, France The interactions between prokaryotes and marine dissolved organic matter (DOM) play a major role in the global carbon cycle. DOM is (technically) divided into high molecular weight (HMW-DOM) and low molecular weight (LMW-DOM) size classes. A large part of the HMW-DOM is composed of carbohydrates (50-60% of HMW-DOM). In this work, we focus on the ability of deepsea prokaryotes to degrade exopolysaccharides (considered to be HMW-DOM) radiolabeled with tritium (3H-EPS). We synthesized 3H-EPS and incubated them with deep-sea samples from the DYFAMED time-series station (NW Mediterranean Sea) under in situ pressure conditions to estimate the deep-sea prokaryotic capacity to degrade HMW-DOM. Simultaneously, we examined 3H-Glucose assimilation rates and prokaryotic production (3H-Leucine). Degradation rates were higher under in situ pressure than at atmospheric conditions. These results also suggested that EPS may sustain prokaryotic production in the deep-sea waters. Using Micro-CARD-FISH, in order to determine the contribution of each prokaryotic group to the degradation of 3H-EPS, we observed that at the surface, 14% of total Bacteria cells degrade the 3H-EPS. This percentage decreases with depth to 6% of relative participation. In contrast, the participation of Euryarchaea on degradation of 3H EPS increases with depth (from 11% of total euryarchaea at the surface to 59% at 2000m). For Crenarchaea, the relative percentage of cells assimilating 3H EPS is very weak (between 1 and 3%). These major results indicate that deep-sea Euryarchaea more actively degrade semi-labile compounds in the deep sea than other prokaryotic groups. IS THE DISTRIBUTION OF MARINE NITROGEN FIXATION RELATED TO TEMPERATURE? BRAUER V. S.1,2,3, DE JONGE V. N.4, BUMA A. G. J.1 AND F. J. WEISSING2 1 Ocean Ecosystems, Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies, University of Groningen, Kerklaan 30, 9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands 2 Theoretical Biology, Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies, University of Groningen, Kerklaan 30, 9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands 3 Present address: Aquatic Microbiology, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 127, 1018 WS Amsterdam, The Netherlands 4 Institute of Estuarine & Coastal Studies, University of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX, UK The metabolic theory of ecology (MTE) is an intriguing but controversial theory that tries to explain ecological patterns at all scales on the basis of first principles. Temperature plays a pivotal role in this theory. According to MTE, the Arrhenius relationship that describes the effect of temperature on biochemical reactions extends to a ‘universal temperature dependence’ that encompasses all kinds of processes and scales up to the cellular, the organismal, and the community level. In this study we test the prediction that community growth rate is temperature dependent in an Arrhenius-like way. First, we performed a literature review of the scanty data on the temperature dependence of the rates of metabolism, photosynthesis and growth of communities. In contrast to the predictions of MTE, the community activation energies did not cluster around 0.32 eV, the activation energy of photosynthesis and primary production or around 0.65 eV, the activation energy of metabolism. However, in none of the published studies the conditions were sufficiently controlled to allow firm conclusions. We therefore also performed replicated and controlled experiments using natural assemblages of marine plankton. As predicted by MTE, the maximal growth rates of community biomass increased linearly in an Arrhenius plot, with a slope close to 0.32 eV. However, a diversity of other models for the temperature dependence of community growth rates fit our data equally well. Hence, our results are at best a weak confirmation of MTE. TRANSCRIPTOME FINGERPRINTING: AN APPROACH TO EXPLORE GENE EXPRESSION PATTERNS IN MARINE MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES COLL-LLADÓ M., S.G. ACINAS AND C. PEDRÓS-ALIÓ Department of Marine Biology and Oceanography, Institut de Ciències del Mar, CSIC, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain Fingerprinting DNA approaches such DGGE, t-RFLP or ARISA are widely used to compare diversity and explore dynamics of the marine microbial communities allowing the comparison of a large number of samples at a relatively low cost. However, information about dynamics of the genes expressed by such communities is barely known. Specific gene expression can be successfully detected through quantitative RT-PCR, and microarrays are helpful tools to detect the expression level of a set of known genes. In addition, the 454 pyrosequencing technology has been recently applied to analyze marine microbial communities transcriptomes. However, this technology is still very costly and provides short sequences that many times cannot be assigned to any known gene. In this sense, alternative approaches are needed to systematically compare and detect gene expression patterns at high-throughput level and with reasonable time and money costs. We have adapted the differential display technique based on the PCR amplification of expressed transcripts to interrogate natural microbial eukaryotic communities. Unlike other techniques, differential display does not require prior knowledge of the mRNA sequences to be detected. We have used a set of arbitrary primers coupled with a fluorescence labeled primer targeting the poly(A) tail of the eukaryotic mRNA, with further detection of the resulting labeled cDNA products in an automated genetic analyzer. Comparing the electropherogram patterns from several samples, we obtain a pattern with peaks that represent environment-specific transcripts. This Transcriptome Fingerprinting Analysis (TFA) has been optimized by testing the sensitivity of the method for different RNA concentrations, and the reproducibility of the gene expression patterns with increasing time after sampling. We observed that time did not alter the patterns of gene expression significantly as long as samples were kept in ice, for the picoeukaryotic transcripts retrieved at least up to 8 hours after sampling with several specific primer combinations. Finally, our approach was used in the Blanes Bay Microbial Observatory during two diel cycles both in open sea and in coastal waters. Our results show that TFA is a promising approach to explore the dynamics of global gene expression patterns and to reveal specific differences in transcripts among different samples and/or environmental conditions. PHOTOHETEROTROPHY IN QUÉBEC LAKES COTTRELL M. T.1, L. FAUTEUX2, P. DEL GIORGIO2 AND D. L. KIRCHMAN1 1 2 School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Lewes, DE 19958 USA University of Québec at Montreal, Montreal H3C 3P8 Canada Prokaryotic microbes that rely on photoheterotrophic metabolism consume organic materials and harvest light energy, which presents challenges when attempting to place them in existing food web models. The current framework includes two distinct compartments for phototrophic microbes that produce organic materials and heterotrophic microbes that consume organic materials. In order to learn where photoheterotrophs fit in aquatic food webs it is necessary to understand their biogeographical patterns, the environmental conditions that control their abundance and diversity, and their underlying ecological significance. Our work focuses on the role of photoheterotrophic microbes in freshwaters and uses a unique set of analytical tools for examining these microbes in the lakes of southern Québec, the Laurentian region north of Montreal and boreal lakes in the taiga regions of northern Québec. These lakes vary in several environmental properties (e.g. trophic status, DOC concentrations, color and turbidity) that are hypothesized to affect photoheterotroph abundance and diversity. We are using 454 pyrosequencing of genes that are unique to photoheterotrophs and 16S rRNA genes that are found in all prokaryotes in order to test hypotheses about community dynamics and environmental controls of photoheterotrophic microbes. Understanding the biogeography, including the large-scale spatial patterns along environmental gradients and patterns of seasonal succession are essential first steps towards assessing the potentially distinct impacts of photoheterotrophs on biogeochemical processes in freshwaters. INSIGHTS ON DIVERSITY AND DYNAMICS OF BACTEROIDETES CO-EXISTING POPULATIONS IN THE NORTHWESTERN MEDITERRANEAN SEA DÍEZ-VIVES C1. , J.M. GASOL1, B. DÍEZ1, V. BALAGUÉ1, T. POMMIER2, C. PEDRÓS-ALIÓ1 AND S.G. ACINAS1 1 2 Dep. de Biologia Marina i Oceanografia, Institut de Ciències del Mar, CSIC, Barcelona, Spain Ecosystmes Lagunaires, Université Montpellier II - CC093, 34 095 Montpellier Cedex 5, France Marine Bacteroidetes contribute up to 30% of total marine bacterioplankton and play a relevant role in the degradation of particulate organic matter. Many representatives of this group have gliding motility and the capacity to degrade polymers, possibly allowing them to grow on detritus or algal cell particles using the polymeric compounds as carbon and energy sources. Genomes of Bacteroidetes have shown the presence of proteorhodopsins indicating a potential phototrophic function and revealing potential alternative ecological strategies. Despite their abundance and ecological relevance, little is known about the populations of Bacteroidetes co-existing in the ocean. Probes and primers specific for Bacteroidetes have been previously described for FISH (CF319, CFB560) and DGGE (CFB555, Cyt1020R) approaches respectively, but we decided to design of a new, marine Bacteroidetes-specific primer (CF418F) based on: (i) the increasing number of sequences available in databases, (ii) the lack of specificity of some of the primers currently in use and (iii) to avoid the nested PCR step needed for the CF555 and Cyt1020R primers for DGGE analyses. In silico test of the CF418F primer with the latest RDPII database (Release 10, March 2010 with 461183 good quality and >1200bp sequences) resulted in 48049 hits of a total of 23154 Bacteroidetes-sequences, with a 48% of coverage. Even if this primer is not covering all Bacteroidetes, it is highly specific for some marine Bacteroidetes groups such as the family Flavobacteriaceae with 71% of coverage and presents very few out-group hits. This primer was tested on pure cultures and DGGE band sequences demonstrated its 100% specificity with all sequences recovered being Bacteroidetes. We explored the genetic heterogeneity (microdiversity) and dynamics of marine Bacteroidetes using DGGE profiles and the partial sequencing of the 16S rRNA genes at four different scales: (i) the temporal series with monthly sampling carried out at a surface coastal station: Blanes Bay Microbial Observatory along a two year period (2007-2008), (ii) a horizontal profile along a transect from coastal to offshore open surface waters, (iii) vertical profiles at four stations covering from surface waters down to 2000m depth and (iv) we explored the differences among free-living and attached marine Bacteroidetes assemblages retrieved from 0.22 µm and (GF/A) pore size filters throughout a year. Bacteroidetes were found in most of the water samples and exhibited high diversity with a maximum at the DCM, and presented recurrent seasonal patterns. MANIPULATION OF TOP-DOWN PRESSURE AND ITS EFFECTS ON THE GROWTH RATES OF DIFFERENT BACTERIAL FUNCTIONAL AND PHYLOGENETIC GROUPS FERRERA I.1, J. M. GASOL1, M. SEBASTIÁN1, E. HOJEROVA2, AND M. KOBLIZEK2 1 2 Dpt. Biologia Marina i Oceanografia. Institut de Ciències del Mar. Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain Institute of Microbiology, Trebon, Czech Republic Aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs (AAPs) are a ubiquitous part of the marine microbial communities. Data from the Atlantic Ocean and the Baltic Sea have shown that these bacteriochlorophyll-containing bacteria grow at rates much higher than those of the total community. We first studied their abundance and dynamics at the Blanes Bay Microbial Observatory (BBMO, coastal Western Mediterranean) where, based on diel changes of bacteriochlorophyll a, we estimated the AAP community to grow at rates of 1.1 to 1.5 day-1, which is much faster than the rates reported for the bulk heterotrophic bacterial community of that environment (6-yr. average±SE, 0.16±0.02 d-1). Despite their growth rates above those of other bacteria, AAPs accounted for only 3-8% of total prokaryote abundance. We studied this phenomenon by performing experiments of top-down manipulation in which the pressure of predators and viruses was reduced. We calculated the growth rates of AAP and compared them to those of different phylogenetic groups (Bacteroidetes, the alfaproteobacterial groups Roseobacter and SAR11, and Gammaproteobacteria and its subgroup Alteromonas). In these experiments, AAPs presented growth rates between 2 and more than 3 divisions per day, whereas the average growth rate for total heterotrophic bacteria was approximately one division per day. The phylogenetic groups Roseobacter and Gammaproteobacteria, which include members of the AAP bacteria, showed similar growth rates (1-3 divisions per day). However, the group that showed the fastest growth was Alteromonas, although typically accounts for a very low percentage of the prokaryotic community of the BBMO. Bacteroidetes, which on average constitute ca. 11% of the bacterial community in the study site, showed intermediate growth rates (1-2 divisions per day). The slower growths in all treatments were those of the SAR11 group which, however, has been shown to dominate year-round in the NW Mediterranean surface waters and seems to be the most abundant bacterial group in the world’s oceans. These results indicate that the role that some minor groups, such as the AAP among others, may play in the recycling of organic matter in the ocean is more important than what their abundances alone would predict. ANAEROBIC NITROGEN FIXATION: MOLECULAR AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL APPROACHES FERNÁNDEZ C.1, 2,3, L. FARIAS3,4 , AND O. ULLOA3,4 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 3 Centro de Investigación Oceanográfica en el Pacífico Sur-Oriental (FONDAP-COPAS), Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160-C, Concepción, Chile 4 Laboratorio de Procesos Oceanográficos Física y Clima, Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160-C, Concepción, Chile Nitrogen fixation is an essential process by which atmospheric dinitrogen gas is biologically transformed to ammonia, compensating for global nitrogen losses that occur through denitrification and anammox. The current view is that inputs and losses of nitrogen via these processes are spatially separated in the ocean. However, using a stable isotope approach (15N2 assimilation), we explored the occurrence of Nitrogen fixation in the water column of the permanent upwelling off Peru and northern Chile (12 - 20ºS), a globally important nitrogen sink, driven by subsurface oxygen deficient conditions. Our results showed active nitrogen fixation at rates going from 0.02 to 3.5 nmol L-1 d-1 with higher contributions of “new nitrogen” coming from the suboxic layer of the OMZ (51 - 697 mmol m-2 d-1) compared to the oxic-euphotic layer (2.3 – 9.89 mmol m-2 d-1). Phylogenetic analyses of dinitrogenase reductase genes sequences revealed the presence of diazotrophic prokaryotic picoplankton might be able of performing anaerobic diazotrophic activity. Our results thus demonstrate the occurrence of nitrogen fixation in surface nutrient-rich coastal upwelling waters and coincide with nitrogen losses through denitrification and anammox in both time and space. IRON BIOAVAILABILITY FOR MARINE BACTERIA: A SINGLE CELL APPROACH FOURQUEZ M.1,2, P. CATALA1,2, I. OBERNOSTERER1,2 AND S. BLAIN1,2 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France Heterotrophic bacteria are key players in the biogeochemical cycle of iron in the marine environment. They modify the chemical speciation and therefore the bioavailability of iron, and they compete for the access to iron with other microorganisms. The capability of different bacterial groups to access various chemical forms of iron is, however, ignored thus far. Over the past few years microautoradiography was successfully applied to link bacterial diversity to the cycling of elements such as C, P and S. The aim of our study is to develop a similar approach based on the radioisotope 55 Fe. We will present the first results of this technique applied to bacterial strains (Alteromonas macleodeii) grown under iron-controlled conditions, and to a natural community of heterotrophic bacteria collected in the NW Mediterranean Sea. We will discuss the potential, the difficulties and the limits of microautoradiography using 55Fe in the marine environment. BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE RARE ARCTIC MICROBES GALAND P.E.1,2,3, E.O. CASAMAYOR4, D. KIRCHMAN3 AND C. LOVEJOY5 1 Department of Continental Ecology-Limnology, Centre d’Estudis Avancats de Blanes–CSIC, Blanes, Spain 2 UPMC Univ Paris 06, FRE 3350, LECOB, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, FRE 3350, LECOB, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 4 School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Lewes, DE, USA 5 Québec-Océan, Département de Biologie, and Institut de Biologie Intégrative et des Systèmes, Université Laval, Québec, QC, Canada Understanding the role of microbes in the oceans has focused on taxa that occur in high abundance; yet most of the marine microbial diversity is largely determined by a long tail of lowabundance taxa. This rare biosphere may have a cosmopolitan distribution because of high dispersal and low loss rates, and possibly represents a source of phylotypes that become abundant when environmental conditions change. However, the true ecological role of rare marine microorganisms is still not known. Here, we use pyrosequencing to describe the structure and composition of the rare biosphere and to test whether it represents cosmopolitan taxa or whether, similar to abundant phylotypes, the rare community has a biogeography. Our examination of 740,353 16S rRNA gene sequences from 32 bacterial and archaeal communities from various locations of the Arctic Ocean showed that rare phylotypes did not have a cosmopolitan distribution but, rather, followed patterns similar to those of the most abundant members of the community and of the entire community. The distribution of communities was explained by the hydrography of the Arctic Ocean and subsequent circulation of its water masses. Water masses probably act as physical barriers limiting the dispersal and controlling the diversity of microbes in the ocean. We conclude that the rare biosphere has a biogeography and that its tremendous diversity is most likely subjected to ecological processes such as selection, speciation, and extinction. GROWTH AND ACTIVITY RATES OF BACTERIAL GROUPS: CAN WE INFER GENERALIZATIONS ? GASOL J.M. Institut de Ciències del Mar, ICM-CSIC, E-08003 Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain Linking the role that marine bacterioplankton play in the carbon cycle with the structure of the bacterial community is a relevant step in our understanding of how oceans work and of the relevance that microbial diversity has in biogeochemical cycling. It can be approached in different ways, and one of these is the assignement of general ecological roles to all the bacteria that belong to a specific bacterial group. In other words, the identification of common ecological traits among the members of specific groups. Groups are determined according to the availability of group-specific fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) probes, at the level of domain, class, families, or even clades (e.g. SAR11). These traits and their variation can shed light on fundamental questions in biology, including why organisms live where they do and how they will respond to global change, but can also be used by ocean modellers if the bacterial black box is to be open into smaller boxes. Here we review published experiments using the MAR-FISH technique to detect general patterns in the utilization of simple model compounds by specific bacterial groups. We have compiled all available data, including some unpublished of our own, to test whether the study-specific patterns hold also at a larger scale of analysis. We also compare the intrinsic growth rates of the different marine bacterioplankton groups in situ, and in the absence of predators or viruses, to stablish the range of potential growth rates of the diverse groups and test whether there are trends consistent across studies. Our results show repetitive patterns in the ecological strategy of some groups and no clear conclusions for some other groups. COMPARISON OF MASSIVELY PARALLEL DEEP SEQUENCING AND MOLECULAR PROFILING TO EVALUATE THE SEASONAL CHANGES IN SUB-ANTARCTIC AND ANTARCTIC MARINE BACTERIOPLANKTON COMMUNITIES GHIGLIONE J.F.1,2 AND A. MURRAY3 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 3 Earth and Ecosystem Sciences, Desert Research Institute, 2215 Raggio Parkway, Reno NV 89512 Marine bacterioplankton diversity was examined at several time points over the annual cycle at sub-Antarctic Kerguelen Islands (KI) and Antarctic Peninsula (AP) coastal sites in order to establish a better understanding of the extent and nature of variation at these different latitudes. A combination of molecular ecological methods targeting the 16S rRNA gene (DGGE, CE-SSCP and massively parallel v6 tag pyrosequencing) provided increasing degrees of information concerning the richness, evenness and identity of marine bacterioplankton. The findings suggest that the sub-Antarctic was more diverse while the extent of temporal variation in the Antarctic Peninsula was higher. The largest shifts in diversity coincided with phytoplankton blooms arising with the spring or spring to summer transition in both locations. Deep tag sequencing results corroborated with the DDGE and CE-SSCP profiling though some differences appeared in the relative abundances (or intensities of peaks or bands) of sequences detected. Though the KI and AP bacterioplankton communities overall harboured low similarity levels; the majority of sequenced v6 rRNA gene tags showed a seasonal trend, in which three times more tags were associated with winter. The distribution of sequences within the Gammaproteobacteria, Alphaproteobacteria and Bacteriodetes differed between the two regions studied. Cosmopolitan oceanic bacterioplankton such as SAR11, and the Southern Ocean RCA cluster varied little with season and were dominant at both sites. A number of abundant Rhodobacteraceae and uncultivated Gammaproteobacteria-associated tags illustrated intense seasonal variation at both sites however. This new broadened and deeper understanding of bacterioplankton diversity and ecology will contribute to an expanding baseline concerning high latitude bacterioplankton that will serve as an anchor as we move to developing approaches and sensitive indicators to understand climate change impacts in the polar oceans. THE ROSEOBACTER RCA CLUSTER – ITS OCCURRENCE, DIVERSITY AND POTENTIAL SIGNIFICANCE GIEBEL H.-A1, D. KALHOEFER1, S. VOGET2, T. BRINKHOFF1 AND M. SIMON1 1 Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment, University of Oldenburg, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany 2 Göttingen Genomics Laboratory, University of Göttingen, Grisebachstr. 8, 37077 Göttingen, Germany Clone sequences of the Roseobacter Clade Affiliated (RCA) cluster constitute the largest cluster within the roseobacters and derive predominantly from planktonic habitats. The aim of our studies was to quantify its occurrence in the Southern Ocean and the temperate North Sea and to obtain isolates for further physiological and genomic studies. The biogeographical occurrence of RCA bacteria was restricted from temperate to polar regions indicating adaptations to colder habitats. Analyses by RCA-specific quantitative PCR showed that in the Southern Ocean this phylogenetic narrow lineage constituted up to 36% of total bacterial 16S rRNA genes with highest fractions in the Antarctic coastal current. In the southern and eastern North Sea RCA bacteria constituted up to 15 and 21% of total bacterial 16S rRNA genes in fall and spring, respectively. Local RCA abundance was positively correlated to phaeopigments and chlorophyll, dissolved and particulate organic carbon, turnover rates of dissolved free amino acids, temperature, and negatively to salinity. Three 16S rRNA RCA phylotypes were detected in total, whereas in most samples only one phylotype was observed. An abundant RCA strain, “Candidatus Planktomarina temperata”, was isolated from the southern North Sea by applying dilution cultures. This strain has an identical 16S rRNA gene sequence to the dominant RCA phylotype detected. The analysis of the closed genome of this isolate of a size of 3.2 Mb and 3042 genes showed the presence of the entire BChl a operon. Our studies show that the RCA cluster constitutes an abundant group of pelagic Alphaproteobacteria in polar as well as temperate marine regions and indicate that RCA bacteria play an important role during decaying phytoplankton blooms. Upcoming genomic analyses and comparisons to other roseobacters accompanied by investigations of distinct physiological processes will reveal specific adaptations of RCA bacteria to the pelagic habitat. PRODUCTION AND OCCURRENCE OF SIDEROPHORES ALONG AMT TRANSECTS GLEDHILL M.1, E. MAWJI1, A. MILTON1, G. TARRAN2, M. V. ZUBKOV3, G. WOLFF4, A. THOMPSON4, 1 AND E. P. ACHTERBERG 1 School of Ocean and Earth Science, National Oceanography Centre, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO14 3ZH, UK 2 Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Plymouth, PL1 3DH, UK 3 National Oceanography Centre, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK 4 Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 3GP, UK Iron concentrations in the oceans are very low, varying between <0.5 nM in the open ocean to approximately 20 nM in coastal waters. Iron is known to influence productivity and biodiversity in many parts of the world’s oceans. A complete understanding of the influence of iron on ocean biology depends on our knowledge of (1) the processes controlling iron inputs and losses from the surface of the oceans and the (2) mechanisms governing iron uptake by marine organisms. An important factor underlying both these issues is the need for a thorough understanding of iron speciation in seawater. Iron is thought to be predominantly complexed by organic ligands. The nature of these ligands is currently unknown, however, they have been hypothesized to be produced by biological activity within the water column. In this presentation we describe investigations into one type of iron complex produced by marine bacterioplankton – the siderophores. Siderophores are high affinity iron complexing ligands produced by bacteria as part of their iron uptake mechanism. We describe the variation in siderophore occurrence and production across the biogeographical regions of Atlantic Ocean. Siderophore concentrations measured in seawater varied geographically and correlated weakly with the number of heterotrophic bacteria. We found that siderophores were produced in nutrient enriched seawater incubations throughout the Atlantic Ocean. The variety and concentration of siderophores produced in incubations varied with both geographical location and carbon source. BACTERIAL-ALGAL MUTUALISM AND IRON SUPPLY GREEN D.1, S. AMIN2, M. HART1, W. SUNDA3, F. KÜPPER1 AND C. CARRANO2 1 Scottish Association for Marine Science, Oban, Scotland, UK Dept. Chemistry and Biochemistry, San Diego State University, USA 3 Beaufort Laboratory, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, Beaufort, USA 2 As a part of studies to understand the diversity and functions of bacteria that associate with dinoflagellates and coccolithophores, we observed one genus of bacteria to be ubiquitous in laboratory cultures – the Marinobacter. This frequency of algal-bacterial association suggested the existence of a specific relationship. Abundant siderophore production was observed and viewed as one possible connection between the two bionts–as iron is often very scarce in the sea. Structural analysis identified the siderophore to be vibrioferrin (VF), and that the VF-Fe complex was exquisitely sensitive to light, producing biologically-available Fe(II) as the product photolysis. Using bacterial-free dinoflagellate cultures supplied with VF-Fe chelates, exposure to light was observed to significantly enhance algal Fe uptake rates. Genome analysis of one of our VF-producing Marinobacter revealed an unusually high incidence of eukaryotic-like proteins and the secretion systems, I, II, IV and VI. This coupled with metabolic data, suggests that this bacterium is tuned to the metabolism of algal metabolites, and has the genetic apparatus to associate with eukaryotes. We propose that this model represents the evolution of a mutualistic relationship to solve the perennial problem of algal iron supply in exchange for a good place to live. ACTIVELY REPLICATING BACTERIA IN THE MID-ATLANTIC BIGHT AND SARGASSO SEA GRIM S., B. J. CAMPBELL AND D. L. KIRCHMAN School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Lewes, DE 19958 USA Bacteria play an essential role in the fluxes of dissolved organic matter and nutrients in the marine environment. Bulk bacterial production assays have proven useful for estimating the contribution of bacteria to carbon fluxes, but these assays cannot resolve the roles of community diversity and structure in determining overall rates. Indeed, the scope of these assays may miss a "rare but active" fraction of the bacterial community. Our research goal is to isolate and identify the "rare but active" fraction through the incorporation of a thymidine analog and compare it to the total and "inactive" communities. In this study we assessed marine bacterial activity and community shifts in coastal and open ocean environments through the uptake of 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU), which traces DNA synthesis. Samples from the Mid-Atlantic Bight and Sargasso Sea were incubated with BrdU to label bacterial DNA. Total community DNA was extracted, and the labeled fraction was immunochemically isolated and analyzed using PCR with universal bacterial PCR primers. Community profiles of the labeled and unlabeled fractions were obtained with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. Control samples not treated with BrdU were similarly analyzed. An active fraction of marine bacteria was evident through BrdU labeling, which revealed differences between the labeled and untreated communities. In addition, community structure and activity as assessed through BrdU uptake varied between the two sites. Further examination of diversity is underway with 454 pyrosequencing, and evaluations of abundance of active bacterial clades are planned using specific primers and QPCR. The examination of bacterial activity using BrdU labeling will help evaluate the ecological roles of active bacteria in the marine environment, and will provide further knowledge of the interplay between community diversity and activity. DISTRIBUTION OF C AND N CYCLING IN THE BIOGEOCHEMICAL RATE MEASUREMENTS NORTH ATLANTIC: GENE ABUNDANCE VERSUS HERNDL G. J.1,2, E. SINTES1 AND K. BERGAUER1 1 Dept. of Marine Biology, Faculty Center of Ecology, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria 2 Dept. of Biological Oceanography, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), P.O. Box 59, 1790 AB Den Burg, The Netherlands The deep-water masses of the North Atlantic undergo substantial alterations from their formation in the northern regions to the equatorial regions in terms of inorganic nutrient concentrations and microbial community composition and activity. In the northern North Atlantic, ammonium concentrations are relatively high, even in the bathypelagic waters, coinciding with the presence of ammonia oxidizing Archaea with an amoA gene encoding an ammonia monooxygenase with a putatively lower affinity of ammonia than further south. As all nitrifiers are autotrophs using carbon dioxide as a carbon source, prokaryotic autotrophy might represent a significant source of newly fixed organic carbon in the dark ocean. It is estimated that the mesopelagic chemoautotrophic carbon fixation amounts to about 20-30% of the export phytoplankton production. This ‘dark ocean’s primary production’, albeit hitherto largely ignored, might stimulate the heterotrophic food web in the meso- and bathypelagic global ocean. Overall, there is accumulating evidence now from actual rate measurements and molecular approaches that the dark ocean’s prokaryotic community is, on a per cell level, more active than assumed hitherto. Buoyant or slowly sinking particles in the dark ocean, not collected by sediment traps might represent hot-spots of microbial activity leading to a non-random distribution of microbes. Reconciling the carbon budget for the deep waters of the North Atlantic and for the global dark ocean in general, remains a major challenge, as the measured meso- and bathypelagic carbon demand exceeds the supply by about an order of magnitude. Potential pitfalls in our current understanding of the dark ocean’s carbon flux will be discussed. SPATIAL PATTERNS OF LIGHT STIMULATED BACTERIAL HETEROTROPHIC PRODUCTION JEFFREY W.H.1, J.D. PAKULSKI1, A.J. BALDWIN1, J.P. KASE1, J.A. MOSS1, F. JOUX2,3 AND P.J. NEALE4 1 Center for Environmental Diagnostics and Bioremediation, University of West Florida, Pensacola, FL, USA 2 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 4 Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater, MD, USA Over the past decade there has been considerable interest in photoheterotrophic bacterioplankton in the world’s oceans. Most of the interest in these organisms has focused on the presence of aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs (AAP) and bacteria that contain proteorhodopsins. The functional role of these organisms in carbon cycles, however, remains largely unknown. During this same period, we have been conducting extensive studies of the effects of solar radiation on heterotrophic bacterioplankton production in a wide variety of marine environments. While our primary goal has been to study the effects of ultraviolet radiation, we have often observed that visible light stimulates the incorporation of 3H-leucine and 3H-thymidine. While this observation is widespread, it is not universal. For example, a transect of the Pacific Ocean from 70º N to 68º S showed distinct regions of light stimulated 3H-leucine incorporation that began by 60º N and increased through temperate and subtropic waters in both hemispheres before ceasing in temperate waters of the southern hemisphere. Only at the southern most station (68º S) did we again observe photostimulation of leucine incorporation. In contrast, stimulation of thymidine incorporation was only observed at three regions (35º to 43º N; 2º S; 30º S). There were four regions where thymidine incorporation was inhibited by visible light but only one region where leucine incorporation was inhibited. In subsequent studies we have observed this process to vary seasonally and by location including samples collected in the Arctic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and the Mediterranean Sea. The dissimilarity observed in the patterns of the two substrates suggests that unique community structures at the different locations probably contributed to the observed effects of light O RGANISMS , GENES, PATHWAYS AND REGULATION OF DIMETHYL SULFIDE PRODUCTION FROM DIMETHYLSULFONIOPROPIONATE – A SURFEIT OF BIODIVERSITY JOHNSTON A.W.B., J.D. TODD, A.R.J. CURSON, M.J. SULLIVAN AND M. KIRKWOOD School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, U.K. Different marine bacteria are known to catabolise the abundant anti-stress compound dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), which is made by many marine plankton and a few land plants. Some of these pathways liberate dimethyl sulfide (DMS) an environmentally important volatile that is involved in the global sulfur cycle, in the induction of cloud cover over the oceans and which is a chemoattractant for many marine animals. We study the ddd genes in different bacteria, which allow them to make DMS from DMSP. The main outcomes of this work are: (a) We identified five wholly different enzymes that can cleave DMSP into DMS plus other catabolites (acrylate in some cases, 3-OH-propionate in others). (b) Several of these enzymes were previously in Domains of Unknown Function and even those with homologues with known enzymatic function were unexpected. (c) The ddd genes are subject to horizontal gene transfer, extending to some distantly related “terrestrial” bacteria and even to some eukaryotic microbes. (d) Some individual bacterial strains, mainly in the Roseobacter group, have multiple ways to catabolise DMSP. For example, Roseovarius nubinhibens not only has three DMSP lyases, but it also contains dmdA, a gene identified by Moran’s group, which encodes a DMSP demethylase. This is globally important in DMSP catabolism but it does not liberate DMS. (e) Regulation of the ddd genes has unusual characteristics; (a) in several cases, a DMSP catabolite is the co-inducer and (b) in one case, the ddd operon has no leader sequence and no Shine-Dalgarno sequence. (f) In different bacteria that can fully degrade DMSP, and use it as sole carbon source, the pathways have similarities, but there are also significant differences in the ancillary ddd genes that encode steps in the “downstream” catabolic steps. The relative importance of these pathways in the sulfur cycle will be discussed. COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF HETEROTROPHIC BACTERIA IN THE OCEANIC CARBON CYCLE KIRCHMAN D.L. School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Lewes, DE 19958 USA One of the most important findings in the earth sciences was the high abundance and activity of bacteria, indicating that these microbes are key players in the oceanic carbon cycle. Another important finding was about the high diversity of bacteria in the oceans. This presentation will discuss the links between these two findings and will address questions about the value of community structure data in understanding the role of bacteria in processing dissolved organic material (DOM) in the oceans. It can be argued that we should know as much as possible about the diversity and community structure of the most abundant organism in the biosphere (bacteria). However, a stronger argument is that community structure data provide insights into the regulation of DOM mineralization and the role of bacteria in the carbon cycle of the oceans. HOW FAST DO MARINE BACTERIA GROW ? KOBLÍZEK M.1, O. PRÁSIL1 AND B.A.S. VAN MOOY2 1 2 Institute of Microbiology CAS, 379 81 Trebon, Czech Republic Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA Current data based on radiolabelled Leucine or Thymidine incorporation suggest that marine bacterioplankton in the oligotrophic upper ocean grows at rates of on division per week. However, such low rates conflict with observations from laboratory cultures, genomics studies and the role of the microbial loop in the sea. We analyzed diel changes in bacteriochlorophyll to assess in situ turnover rates of aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs in the euphotic zone of major oceanic gyres in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Using this approach we found that phototrophic bacteria in the Sargasso Sea, in the South Atlantic and in oligotrophic regions of the South Pacific grew at rates of about one division per day. In addition, bacterial phospholipid biosynthesis rates showed similar turnover rates for the broader bacterioplankton community. These results indicate that the bacterioplankton community in the upper oligotrophic oceans grows at rates of about one division per day, which is almost an order of magnitude faster than current estimates. This suggests that bacteria and microbial loop play much more important role in the marine carbon cycle than currently appreciated. IMPACT OF SAHARAN DUST DEPOSITION ON THE BACTERIAL DIVERSITY AND ACTIVITY IN THE NW MEDITERRANEAN SEA LAGHDASS M.1,2, S. BLAIN1,2, M. BESSELING1,2, P. CATALA1,2, C. GUIEU 3,4 AND I. OBERNOSTERER1,2 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 3 Laboratoire d’Océanographie de Villefranche/Mer, CNRS-INSU UMR7093, Observatoire Océanologique, F-06230, Villefranche-sur-Mer, France 4 Université Pierre et Marie Curie-Paris 6, UMR 7093, LOV, Observatoire Océanologique, F-06230, Villefranche-sur-Mer, France The biogeochemical response of the oligotrophic marine environment to dust deposition is likely in part driven by heterotrophic bacteria as they benefit from the input of new nutrients, and they also mediate important biogeochemical processes like changes in iron bioavailability. In this context, the impact of Saharan dust deposition on the bacterial community composition was investigated in 6 large mesocosms (52 m3) deployed at an oligotrophic coastal site in the NW Mediterranean Sea in June 2008 (project DUNE). Applying the fingerprinting technique CE-SSCP, we observed a temporal evolution over the 8 days experimental period of the total (16S rRNA gene) and active (16S rRNA transcripts) bacterial community in both the free-living (< 0.8µm) and particle attached (> 0.8 µm) size fractions. A response to dust addition was detectable only in the composition of the active attached bacterial community at the end of the experiment. 16S rRNA gene clone libraries and CARDFISH revealed that the two OTUs Thiothrix and Alteromonas belonging to Gammaproteobacteria and the Bacteroidetes OTU NS5 were specific to or more abundant in the dust amended than the control mesocosms, however, with overall low relative abundances. Combining our results from the clone libraries and CE-SSCP indicated that dust addition enhanced the relative contribution of Alteromonas macleodii to the active bacterial community attached to particles. The impact of Saharan dust on the activity of particle-attached bacteria suggests a link to the amount and the composition of particles present after dust addition. TEMPERATURE EFFECTS ON VARIATION OF COMMUNITY RESPIRATION LAI C.-C.1 AND F.-K. SHIAH2 1 Institute of Oceanography, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Research Center for Environmental Change, Academia Sinica, National Taiwan University, National Taiwan Ocean University, Taiwan 2 With a two-years (May, 2006~ April 2008) weekly data set take from a P-limited reservoir, this study tried to explore the potential mechanisms in controlling the temporal variation of community respiration rate (CR, 1.18~16.99 mMO2 d-1), bacterial respiration (BR, 0.13~13.03 mMO2 d-1) and the relative importance of BR to CR. The results showed that CR, BR, and dissolve organic carbon (DOC, 38.94~301.63 mMC) were all positively correlated with temperature; while total nitrogen (NO2+NO3, 9.54~73.72 mMN) showed a negative trend with temperature. Laboratory temperature manipulation experiments revealed that temperature could affect CR and BR directly. These indicated that temperature might be the major controlling factor for CR and BR. As to BR contribution, the BR/CR ratio ranged from 3.9~98.8 %, there was no clear seasonal trend of this ratio. DISTRIBUTION AND EXPRESSION OF SAR11 PROTEORHODOPSINS LAMI R.1,2,3, N.J. WEST2,4, P. LEBARON2,3 AND D.L. KIRCHMAN1 1 School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Lewes 19958, USA UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 4 CNRS, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 2 SAR11 is a major phylogenetic group in marine environment and harbors proteorhodopsin (PR), a transmembrane light-dependant proton pump. In this study, we first examined the distribution of SAR11-PR by combining quantitative PCR and a browsing of SAR11-PR sequences from the global ocean sampling dataset and our clone libraries. We found a wide distribution of SAR11-PR cells, but also the existence of coastal and off-shore PR-SAR11 populations at a low phylogenetic level. In addition, we examined how PR expression in SAR11 varies over time in Delaware coastal waters during three 24 h cruises. Expression of SAR11 PR was higher during the day than at night while no differences were found for 16S rRNA genes. Collectively, these data reinforce the importance of PR in the distribution and physiology of SAR11 bacteria. BACTERIAL ASSEMBLAGE COMPOSITION IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN REVEALED BY MASSIVELY PARALLEL SEQUENCING LAMY D.1,2, H. AGOGUÉ1,3, P. R. NEAL4, M. L. SOGIN4 AND G. J. HERNDL1,2 1 Dept. of Biological Oceanography, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), P.O. Box 59, 1790AB Den Burg The Netherlands 2 Dept. of Marine Biology, University of Vienna, Althanstraße 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria 3 Institut du Littoral et de l’Environnement, UMR LIENSs 6250, CNRS-Université de la Rochelle, 2 rue Olympes de Gouges, 17000 La Rochelle, France 4 Josephine Bay Paul Center for Comparative Molecular Biology and Evolution, Marine Biological Laboratory, 7 MBL Street, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, USA Bacterial assemblages from subsurface (100 m depth), meso- (200-1000 m depth) and bathypelagic (below 1000 m depth) zones at 10 stations along a North Atlantic Ocean transect from 60°N to 5°S were characterized using massively parallel pyrotag sequencing of the V6 region of the 16S rRNA gene (V6 pyrotags). In a dataset of more than 830,000 V6 pyrotags we identified 10738 OTUs of which 52 % were singletons. The singletons accounted for less than 2% of the pyrotag abundance, while the 100 and 1,000 most abundant OTUs represented more than 76% and 95%, respectively, of all recovered OTUs. Non-metric Multi-Dimensional Scaling and Canonical Correspondence Analysis of all the OTUs excluding the singletons revealed a clear clustering of the bacterial communities according to the water masses. More than 80% of the 1,000 most abundant OTUs corresponded to Proteobacteria of which 55% were Alphaproteobacteria, mostly composed of the SAR11 cluster. Gammaproteobacteria increased with depth and included a relatively large number of OTUs for Pseudomonadales and Alteromonadales. The bathypelagic zone showed higher taxonomic evenness than the overlying waters, albeit bacterial diversity was remarkably variable. The low-abundance OTUs were responsible for the distinct bacterial communities characterizing the major deep-water masses. Taken together, our results reveal that deep water masses act as bio-oceanographic islands for bacterioplankton leading to water mass-specific bacterial communities in the deep waters of the Atlantic. BIOAVAILABILITY OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER AND BACTERIAL DIVERSITY: INSIGHTS FROM CHEMOSTAT CULTURE EXPERIMENTS LANDA M., BLAIN, S., BATAILLER N., CAPARROS J., CATALA P., DEVEZ, A., LAGHDASS, M. ORIOL, L. AND I. OBERNOSTERER UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France The biological availability of marine dissolved organic carbon (DOC) to heterotrophic bacteria is tightly linked to its source and diagenetic age. Whether different sources of marine DOC are processed by specific populations of heterotrophic bacteria is presently an unresolved question. We wanted to test the hypothesis that DOC produced by different phytoplankton species shapes the composition of the heterotrophic bacterial community through the selection of metabolically adapted bacterial groups. To address this issue, we used chemostat cultures and studied the response of a natural community of heterotrophic bacteria to DOC originating from cultures of Phaeodactylum spp. or Synechococcus spp., respectively. Carbon was the limiting factor throughout the experimental duration, and the heterotrophic bacterial community was continuously supplied with 15 µM of the respective source of phytoplankton-derived DOC. The chemostat cultures (6 liters each) were run for five generation times. We will present first results on bulk parameters such as biomass production and enzymatic activities of the bacterial communities growing on different sources of DOC. Applying the fingerprinting method CE-SSCP, we will present results on the impact of DOC sources on the presence and activity of operational taxonomic units, and discuss the temporal pattern that could reflect an adaptation of the bacterial community facing different sources of DOC. SEASONAL SUCCESSION OF PHYTOPLANKTON COMPOSITION IN FEI-TSUI RESERVOIR LIN C.-H.1, F.-K. SHIAH2 AND T.-Y. HO3 1 Research Center for Environmental Changes, Academia Sinica, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Research Center for Environmental Change, Academia Sinica, National Taiwan University, National Taiwan Ocean University, Taiwan 3 Research Center for Environmental Change, Academia Sinica, Taiwan 2 To understand the annual variation of phytoplankton community composition as well as the relative importance of different phyla in oligotrophic freshwater ecosystem, pigment analysis via HPLC method was conducted on a weekly basis in the Fei-Tsui reservoir from Oct 2007 to Dec 2008. Epilimnion (20 m deep) integrated averaged chlorophyll a concentrations (IChl) ranged 0.51~5.55 mg Chl m-3 with a bloom occurring in autumn. Overall, crytophytes, cyanobateria and diatoms were the three most dominant phyla accounting for 25, 24 and 20% of total IChl, respectively. Green algae (chlorophytes and prasinophytes, 12%) and dinoflagellates (10%) ranked the 4th and 5th in term of relative contribution. The analysis between phyla and environmental factors including temperature, light and mixed layer depth (a proxy of nutrient supply) was performed to understand potential controlling mechanisms. Cyanobacteria biomass did not change much during the studied period. Cryptophytes, prasinophytes and chlorophytes prevailed in the cold, low light level and high nutrient supply seasons. On the other hand, dinoflagellates could be categorized as warm water and low nutrient required species. Diatom biomass showed no significant relationships with environmental factors. It is notable that depletion of diatom bloom in turn was replaced by growing dinoflagellates in warm season. Furthermore, dinoflagellates occupied the light-rich surface waters in comparison with diatoms of similar size. Manipulation experiments suggested that plentiful nutrient stimulated the growth of dinoflagellate more than that of diatoms in high light level and phosphorus-enrichment conditions. Additionally, we found that zeaxanthin pigment concentrations showed a good correlation with cyanobacteria abundance with a slope of 1.06 ± 0.04 fg cell-1, which can be used empirically in converting diagnostic pigment concentrations to cyanobacteria abundance in the study area. DIFFERENT SALINITIES INFLUENCE MICROBIAL EVOLUTION IN COASTAL ANTARCTIC LAKES COMMUNITY COMPOSITION AND LOGARES R.1,2, E. LINDSTRÖM1, S. LANGENHEDER1, J. LAYBOURN-PARRY3, L. TRANVIK1, S. BERTILSSON1 AND K. RENGEFORS4 1 Limnology/Dept. of Ecology & Evolution, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM), CSIC, Barcelona, Spain 3 Bristol Glaciology Centre, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, UK 4 Limnology/Dept. of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden 2 Mounting evidence indicates that salt concentration affects the evolution and composition of aquatic microbial communities. To advance our understanding in this subject, we have studied the microbial communities inhabiting a group of coastal Antarctic lakes that range from freshwater (0) to hypersaline (>250) using Sanger/454 rDNA sequencing and experiments. Most of these lakes are marine-derived closed basins, containing microbial communities that were exposed to drastic salinity changes since the formation of the lakes (<10,000 years). Other lakes are freshwater and were formed by melt-water from the Antarctic ice-plateau. Our results indicated that long-term salinity shifts had a strong influence on the richness, evenness and possibly evolution of the microbial communities living in marine-derived lakes. In particular, diversity decreased at salinity extremes (i.e. freshwater or hypersaline lakes) suggesting strong environmental filtering and local extinctions. Marine-derived microbes were present in saline lakes, but their richness and evenness differed from ancestral marinecoastal communities. In particular, lakes that became hypersaline appeared to be exclusively dominated by Archaea. Experimental results indicated that ancestrally marine dinoflagellate populations have adapted to diverse lake salinities, suggesting that adaptive evolution may have played an important role in shaping the present microbial communities in the lakes. Typical freshwater bacteria were predominant in freshwater lakes, instead of marine-derived groups adapted to low salinity. Freshwater bacteria clustered phylogenetically with lineages present in ice (European glaciers and perennial ice cover of distant Antarctic lakes) and north temperate lakes, suggesting intra- and intercontinental colonisations. Altogether, our results contribute to understand how microbial communities react to environmental change and give insight on microbial long-range colonization capabilities. EFFECTS OF PHOSPHORUS LIMITATION ON MARINE NATURAL PHYTOPLANKTON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION LY J.1, J. KROMKAMP1 AND K.C. TIMMERMANS2 1 Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), Centre for Estuarine and Marine Ecology, P.O. Box 140, 4400 AC Yerseke, The Netherlands 2 Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), P.O. Box 59, 1790 AB Den Burg, Texel, The Netherlands It is currently under debate whether nitrogen, phosphorus or both regulated the primary producers in the marine environment. Phosphorus has been recently considered as a limiting and important nutrient for phytoplankton in coastal ecosystems; however it remains much less documented though no less important. In long term surveys, the Dutch Wadden Sea has been characterized as changing systems; especially a decline of phosphorus had been shown in this systems. The question remains whether the potential P limitation has an impact on phytoplankton community structure and function. A series of nutrient enrichment experiments have been conducted in spring period with addition of different source of nutrients. For each sampling time, fundamental controls of primary production and phytoplankton community composition are measured such as phytoplankton biomass and photosynthesis activity (maximum quantum yield of photosystems II Fv/Fm and rapid light curves). In addition, specific primary production using stable isotope 13C incorporated into phospholipids fatty acids (PLFA) has been measured to assess photosynthetically active organisms in the water mass and alkaline phosphatase activity, use as a common enzyme indicator of phosphorus deficiency in phytoplankton has been quantified via the molecular probe ELF®. We are currently analyzing these environment samples which will allow us to examine how the phytoplankton community changes under a reduction of phosphorus nutrient in the water. Additionally, we are currently looking for eukaryotic microalgae genes which are involved in phosphorus limitation. This might reveal an unexpected ecological role in biogeochemistry cycling. DYNAMIC BACTERIAL COMMUNITIES ON REVERSE-OSMOSIS MEMBRANES IN A FULL-SCALE DESALINATION PLANT MANES DE O. C-L.1,2, N.J. WEST1,3, S. RAPENNE4 AND P. LEBARON1,2 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 4 Veolia Environnement - Centre de recherche sur l'eau, Chemin de la Digue 78600 Maisons Laffitte, France We studied bacterial community structure and dynamics in different compartments of a fullscale desalination plant. Genetic fingerprinting and 16S rRNA gene clone libraries analysis revealed that the bacterial community present on sea-water reverse osmosis (SWRO) membranes was very different from those present in the inflow water, suggesting that specific bacterial groups were adapted for SWRO membrane colonization. Moreover, there were striking differences in the bacterial community composition of membranes between different sampling times, whereas the communities from different water samples taken at different compartments were similar to each other and relatively stable over time. Alphaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria dominated the water clone libraries, whereas Betaproteobacteria and Planctomyces were nearly exclusively found in the membrane libraries. The clustering of sequences at the 97% OTU level revealed that five OTUs were unique to the membrane used for the shortest period comprising one Betaproteobacteria genus, Ideonella, and three different Bacteroidetes OTUs. Interestingly, the typical freshwater genus Ideonella was the dominant OTU for this membrane but was absent from those in use for longer periods. This result suggests that bacteria affiliated to the Ideonella genus could be one of the SWRO membrane primary colonizers. AMMONIUM AND NITRITE OXIDATION (DE) COUPLING IN THE EUPHOTIC ZONE MOLINA V.1, C. FERNANDEZ2,3,4 AND L. FARIAS1,4 1 Laboratorio de Procesos Oceanográficos Física y Clima, Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160-C, Concepción, Chile 2 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 4 Centro de Investigación Oceanográfica en el Pacífico Sur-Oriental (FONDAP-COPAS), Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160-C, Concepción, Chile The coastal area of central Chile (36°S) is characterized by the influence of seasonal winddriven upwelling of low-oxygen (<22 mM), nutrient-rich waters that fertilize the euphotic zone, enhancing primary productivity. Intense degradation of recently produced organic matter at depth also results in significant ammonium availability for nitrifying assemblages. We explored the variability of ammonium oxidation by b-Proteobacteria (bAOB) and archaea (AOA) as well as the coupling of ammonium and nitrite oxidation during active and non active upwelling conditions. AOA and bAOB were studied by the ammonia monooxygenase subunit A (amoA) genes to explore their diversity while their abundance was approached through Q-PCR in DNA and cDNA. Parallel biogeochemical measurements using stable isotopes (15N) and specific Amo and archaeal inhibitors allowed studying the interaction among the ammonium and nitrite oxidizing communities. Measurements of total nitrification showed active nitrate production during the upwelling season with average daily rates of 41 ± 23 nM d-1. Nitrite oxidation was also estimated and reached rates equivalent to those of ammonium oxidation, suggesting a tight coupling between both phases of the nitrification process within the oxygen deficient layer. A single lineage of bAOB, Nitrosospira spp, was present in the water column during the upwelling season, whereas AOA showed a higher diversity that was distributed in all known planktonic clusters. AOA and bAOB average abundances were higher during the upwelling season with values of 15,04 and 167 amoA copies/ml, respectively, than during non-upwelling season (5,91 and 61 amoA copies/ml, respectively). AOA abundance in cDNA also suggests that AOA contribute greatly to aerobic ammonium oxidation mainly during the upwelling season. In summary, our results suggest that ammonium oxidation can be a significant process in seasonal upwelling areas and is performed by an assemblage of archaea and bacteria with changing contribution along the seasonal cycle. EMERGING HORIZONS IN BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING RESEARCH MONTOYA J. Marine Sciences Institute (ICM-CSIC), Barcelona, Spain Two decades of intensive research have provided compelling evidence for a link between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning (B-EF). Whereas early B-EF research concentrated on species richness and single processes, recent studies have investigated different measures of both biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, such as functional diversity and joint metrics of multiple processes. There is also a shift from viewing assemblages in terms of their contribution to particular processes toward placing them within a wider food web context. I will present how biodiversity effects are shaped by multitrophic interactions. Further, I discuss how B-EF metrics and food web relations could be addressed simultaneously. I conclude that addressing traits, multiple processes and food web interactions is needed to capture the mechanisms that underlie B-EF relations in natural assemblages. Finally, I will discuss whether these new horizons may be relevant and practical to address relationships between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in microbial communities. A BIOGEOCHEMIST' S G UIDE ANALYSIS TO Q UANTITATIVE C OMPARATIVE METATRANSCRIPTOME MORAN M. A., S. GIFFORD, S. SHARMA AND J. RINTA-KANTO University of Georgia, Athens GA 30602 USA The potential of metatranscriptomic sequencing to provide insights into the environmental factors that regulate microbial activities depends on how fully the sequence libraries capture community expression (i.e., sample sequencing depth and coverage depth), and the sensitivity with which expression differences between communities can be detected (i.e., statistical power for comparative analysis). We will discuss approaches for making metatranscriptomic data sets more quantitative and comparative. Addition of an internal standard during RNA extraction provided a way to calculate absolute transcript numbers. Coastal waters of the southeastern U.S. were determined to contain 1 x 1012 bacterioplankton mRNA molecules per liter of seawater, although each bacterium averaged only ~190 mRNA molecules per cell. Even large bacterioplankton metatranscriptomic libraries containing ~500,000 possible protein-encoding sequences had low sample sequencing depth, with <1 out of every 10 million mRNA molecules sequenced. The internal standard also allowed quantitative (per liter) estimates of mRNAs representing diagnostic genes marine elemental cycles, providing absolute benchmarks against which time-series and experimentally manipulated transcriptomes can be compared. However, many biogeochemically informative transcript categories had too few counts for robust statistical hypothesis testing, even in large metatranscriptomic libraries. Representing microbial genes and transcripts in a quantitative framework provides an essential bridge between "omics" data and the larger scale ocean processes captured in biogeochemical measures and ecosystem models. THE SEASONAL VARIATION OF IRON STRESS IN THE SCOTIA SEA NIELSDOTTIR M. C.1, T. S. BIBBY1, C. M. MOORE1, R. SANDERS1, D. J. HINZ1, R. KORB2, M. WHITEHOUSE2 AND E. P. ACHTERBERG1 1 School of Ocean and Earth Science, National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, University of Southampton, European Way, Southampton, SO14 3ZH, UK 2 British Antarctic Survey, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge, CB3 0ET, UK Large phytoplankton blooms are associated with islands and shallow water regions in the otherwise low biomass Southern Ocean. The seasonal phytoplankton bloom associated with South Georgia in the Scotia Sea is the largest in the Southern Ocean and displays the greatest longevity, with a clear enhanced signal in satellite derived chlorophyll for a duration of ~16-20 weeks. The work presented here is the first comprehensive study of seasonal variations in phytoplankton biomass and iron availability in the Scotia Sea for the austral spring and summer seasons. The Scotia Sea to south of the islands of South Georgia exhibited low dissolved iron (dFe) surface water concentrations (<0.01-0.05 nM) and low Fv/Fm values (indicative of iron stress) during the spring and summer seasons. Nevertheless, chlorophyll a concentrations of up to 1.4 mg m-3 indicated a sufficient iron supply possibly from the Antarctic mainland and winter overturning to initiate bloom conditions. Surface water concentrations of dissolved iron (dFe) in the South Georgia bloom waters (north of the islands) were slightly higher during summer than spring (0.31 nM compared to 0.20 nM, with P>0.05) and the nitrate drawdown between the two seasons was 16 uM nitrate, indicative of new production. We suggest that the South Georgia bloom is sustained by a continuous benthic supply of iron from the South Georgia shelf. In addition, enhanced dFe concentrations (ca. 0.25 nM) were observed in a cryptophyte dominated bloom in the southern Scotia Sea near the South Orkney Islands, which highlights important differences in phytoplankton bloom dynamics for the Southern Ocean island systems. ECOLOGICAL ROLES OF PROTEORHODOPSIN PHOTOTROPHY IN MARINE BACTERIA PINHASSI J. Marine Microbiology, School of Natural Sciences, Linnaeus University, 9182 Kalmar, Sweden Since the discovery of heterotrophic bacteria being both numerous and actively growing in the sea, three decades of intense studies have revealed bulk activities and the biodiversity of bacterioplankton. This has led to the conclusion that marine microbes play a crucial role in regulating global biogeochemical cycles for many elements. Still, important challenges lay ahead in defining the role of specific microbial populations in the turnover of particular elements and the fluxes of energy in the water column. Confounding the picture even more is the surprisingly frequent discovery of novel metabolisms found among marine microbes, so that the once so easy-to-define division of microorganisms into heterotrophic and autotrophic compartments no longer seems to hold through. Just consider the cases of anammox, deep-sea dark carbon dioxide fixation and proteorhodopsin. In the case of proteorhodopsin, this photoprotein found in representatives of the most diverse groups of longconsidered typically heterotrophic bacteria makes the whole concept of heterotrophy somewhat diffuse. To what degree are heterotrophic bacteria containing proteorhodopsin really heterotrophic? Does proteorhodopsin make any difference to the organisms? And in that case, what difference does it make? And of particular interest to the present workshop, does proteorhodopsin phototrophy have an impact on the rates of microbially dominated biogeochemical cycling? Although few answers to these questions are obvious at this time, these issues will be touched upon in this lecture, with examples from some different proteorhodopsin-containing bacteria. THE ROLE OF FAECAL PELLET MICRO-ENVIRONMENTS IN OCEANIC METHANE PRODUCTION ROWAN A.K.1, S.T. WILSON2, M.C. HART1, D. H. GREEN1 AND A. D. HATTON1 1 The Scottish Association for Marine Science, Dunstaffnage marine laboratory, Oban, Argyll, PA37 1QA 2 Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education (C-MORE), 1000 Pope Road, MSB 629 Honolulu, HI 96822 USA Zooplankton faecal pellets in the pelagic environment represent important hotspots for biogeochemical cycling. Despite this, the microbial communities and processes involved are not well understood. The ‘oceanic methane paradox’ signifies an example of this. Methane exists at supersaturated concentrations in oxygenated upper oceans and is thought to result from in situ production. This is paradoxical as methanogens, the organisms thought to be responsible, are considered to be strict anaerobes. One possible explanation is that anaerobic micro-sites may exist; such as within zooplankton faecal pellets which may support methanogenic populations. Active methanogensis has been observed in faecal pellets however there is some debate as to the existence of true anoxic zones, capable of supporting methanogens, in pelagic particulate material. We applied culture-independent approaches to determine the microbial communities present in faecal pellets (Loch Creran, Scotland). Results show that faecal pellets harbour a highly diverse microbial consortium including methanogens, sulphate-reducers. Furthermore faecal pellet anaerobic incubations demonstrated methane production and indicated viability of the methanogenic populations. These findings have important implications for the understanding of microbial biogeochemical cycling in the pelagic environment. D IATOM FLUX ASSEMBLAGES FROM A NATURALLY IRON FERTILIZED IMPLICATIONS FOR CARBON CYCLING IN THE PRESENT DAY AND GLACIAL OCEAN BLOOM: SALTER I.1,2,3, R.S. LAMPITT1, A.E.S. KEMP1, G.A. WOLFF4, C. M. MOORE1, J. HOLTVOETH4, M.T. HERNANDEZ-SANCHEZ5 1 National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, University of Southampton Waterfront Campus, European Way, Southampton, SO14 3ZH, United Kingdom. 2 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 4 Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of Liverpool, 4, Brownlow Street, Liverpool, L69 3GP, United Kingdom 5 Department of Chemistry, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 1TS, United Kingdom Changes in the supply of iron to high nutrient low chlorophyll (HNLC) regions are thought to critically influence marine primary production and export of organic carbon (OC) from the upper ocean and hence concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide in both present day and glacial scenarios. Purposeful additions have unequivocally demonstrated increased phytoplankton productivity in response to iron, and naturally Fe-fertilized island systems indicate a concomitant increase in OC flux. We present data on diatom assemblages and the biochemical properties of sinking particles to elucidate the mechanisms responsible for enhanced deep-water OC flux in response to natural iron fertilization (CROZeX) of the Southern Ocean. Our data indicate that the availability of iron drives segregated adaptations to ecological niches which are reflected in the diatom flux assemblages and elemental stoichiometry of sinking particles. Deep-water carbon flux from the naturally-fertilized bloom area is tightly correlated with the resting stage flux of a single diatom species, Eucampia antarctica. The results suggest that the enhanced carbon flux observed in naturally fertilized systems is not entirely attributable to iron relief of open ocean diatoms. Instead we suggest that the advection of neritic centric diatom assemblages from island systems and the subsequent flux of resting stages significantly contribute to carbon sequestration resulting from natural iron fertilization. Our data therefore suggest that carbon export estimates from current natural iron fertilization studies represents a highly specific response of island systems chosen as natural laboratories. In combination with observations of enhanced nitrate utilization and dominance of E. antarctica in Last Glacial Maximum sediments our data also suggest a potential role for Eucampia resting stage ecology in glacial-interglacial CO2 transitions. SPECIFIC PHYTOPLANCTON – BACTERIA INTERACTIONS THROUGH DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON SARMENTO H. AND J. M. GASOL Institut de Ciències del Mar, ICM-CSIC, E-08003 Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain Marine phytoplankton and heterotrophic prokaryotes (HP) are major components of our biosphere that interact continuously: HP utilizes the dissolved organic carbon derived from phytoplankton excretion or cell lysis, and mineralization by HP provides inorganic nutrients for phytoplankton. For this reason, these two communities are expected to be closely linked, but the fact is that the two compartments interact in very complex ways that remain largely unexplored. We developed the use of radiolabeled algal exudates as a tracer in the MAR-FISH technique (microautoradiography combined with fluorescent in situ hybridization) to quantify the strength of the interactions between several phytoplankton species and the major phylogenetic groups of HP. The incubations of sea water with radiolabeled exudates from different algal species revealed major differences in the percentage of cells of each bacterial type taking up the products. The patterns of the interactions revealed specific linkages between HP phylogenetic groups and phytoplankton species, showing that HP community structure can be shaped by the phytoplankton assemblage. Moreover, this study provided additional information about the intrinsic ecology of each bacterial group: Gammaproteobacteria (particularly Alteromonas) and Roseobacter (Alpha-proteobacteria) increased remarkably their contribution to total community in terms of biomass when incubated with algal exudates in a 24h period, while members of Bacteroidetes were very active in the uptake of the labeled organic compounds in the short term, disproportionally to the net growth of this group in the long term. The ecological implications of these results are of great relevance explaining the huge bacterial diversity observed in the sea. DRIVERS OF ORGANIC MATTER TURNOVER IN THE SEA – SOME EXAMPLES FROM THE ROSEOBACTER CLADE SIMON M., S. HAHNKE, H.-A. GIEBEL, H. OSTERHOLZ AND T. BRINKHOFF Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment, University of Oldenburg, D-26131 Oldenburg, Germany The Roseobacter clade has been shown to be a prominent component of the bacterioplankton in marine surface waters, predominantly in temperate to polar regions and in particular in the course of phytoplankton blooms. Several distinct clusters with typical pelagic representatives have been identified in which phylotypes and a few isolated strains occur. The genome of several of these strains has been sequenced. Available metagenomic, metatranscriptomic and genomic data provide most valuable insights into the metabolic potential and gene expression patterns of these roseobacters. However, surprisingly little work has been done so far on the physiology of representative model organisms to better understand growth and interactions with other bacterioplankton components and with phytoplankton and thus specific biogeochemical roles of these organisms. We obtained several isolates of Roseobacter clusters typical for the water column from the North Sea and examined growth and various physiological properties, including substrate spectra and interactions with phytoplankton algae. Isolates belong to the RCA cluster, the SH6-1 cluster which is most closely related to the NAC11-6 cluster, and others are affiliated closely to the genera Sulfitobacter, Loktanella and Oceanibulbus. The results show that the isolates have rather distinct preferences for selected amino acids, monosaccharides and oligosaccharides, and that they can respond very differently to substrates released from individual algal species. Some of these observations are in line with the seasonal occurrence of these strains in the North Sea in the course of phytoplankton blooms and may explain some aspects of their growth control. The isolates provide a valuable basis for detailed analyses of specific processes in the organic matter cycling in pelagic systems and complement metagenomic and metatranscriptomic analyses. They may further be used for systems biology approaches in microbial oceanography. ARCHAEAL AMOA: NEW INSIGHTS INTO THE DIVERSITY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY OF ARCHAEAL AMMONIA OXIDIZERS SINTES E.1,2, K. BERGAUER1, D. DE CORTE2,3 AND G. H. HERNDL1,2 1 Department of Marine Biology, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, 1090 Vienna, Austria Department of Biological Oceanography, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), PO Box 59, 1790 AB, Den Burg, The Netherlands, 3 Center for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies, University of Groningen, PO Box 14, 9750 AA Haren, The Netherlands 2 Mesophilic archaeal ammonia oxidizers (AOA) are abundant in a diverse range of environments ranging from soils to sediments, and from freshwater to marine systems. The presence of diverse and distinct crenarchaeal communities in different habitats, as well as a few cosmopolitan AOA have been described. Results with different primer sets developed for AOA over the last years revealed remarkable differences in the abundance of AOA in the oceanic realm. In an attempt to resolve this apparent discrepancy, we used two previously applied archaeal amoA primer sets and compared them in two contrasting environments, a shallow Arctic and a deep open Atlantic site. Applying these two archaeal amoA primer sets, we could distinguish an AOA cluster dominating at the base of the euphotic layer in the Atlantic (100 m) and in the Artic throughout the water column (down to 300 m) from a deep-water crenarchaeal cluster extending from 250 m to 7000 m in the Atlantic. Thus, the two different AOA clusters apparently harbor two different amoA genes related to the prevailing environmental conditions, particularly the ammonia availability. The two different amoA genes encode amoA proteins with putatively different substrate affinity allowing the two AOA clusters to occupy different ecological niches resulting in a specific stratification with depth and a distinct biogeography. Future work to unveil the actual role of the AOA in the nitrogen cycle must therefore focus on the isolation of these different groups and the characterization of their ammonia oxidation kinetics. IN SITU GENE EXPRESSION BY MARINE BACTERIOPLANKTON AT HIGH PHYLOGENETIC RESOLUTION SUZUKI M.T. 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France Marine bacterioplankton, and their genomes have been the subjects of major research initiatives in the past decade and a vast amount of new knowledge has been gathered. This is particularly true for their spatial and temporal distributions and metabolic capabilities. However measurements of activity by specific prokaryotes in the environment are still lacking for the full understanding of their roles in the biogeochemistry of the Ocean. For the past five years we have worked on measuring the activity on specific bacterioplankton based on messenger RNA quantification using real time quantitative PCR. The level of phylogenetic resolution to be targeted by these assays is one issue frequently associated with the approach in environmental settings. We will present results of two studies where a relatively fine level of resolution (i.e. discrimination of different DNA sequences, coding nearly-identical amino acid sequences) was chosen. Diel measurements of SAR11-like proteorhodopsin-coding genes at the Pacific station Aloha and of the cell division gene ftsZ in a NW Atlantic coastal site showed patterns suggestive of biological responses to the diel cycle, even though in both cases it appears that different subpopulations (i.e. patches) were sampled due to advective effects. These studies showcase the feasibility of the gene expression approach, but emphasize the need for studies comparing gene expression at different levels of phylogenetic resolution. FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY OF BACTERIOPLANKTON ACROSS THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA ASSESSED BY FLOW CYTOMETRY, CELL SORTING AND FISH TECHNIQUES TALARMIN A.1, 2, 3, F. VAN WAMBEKE1, P. CATALA2,3, C. COURTIES2,4 AND P. LEBARON2, 3 1 Laboratoire de Microbiologie, Géochimie, & Ecologie Marines, UMR CNRS 6117, Université de la Méditerranée, Campus de Luminy, F-13288 Marseille, France 2 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 4 CNRS, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France Small-sized organisms are major actors of the biogeochemical cycles in poor marine environments like oligotrophic oceans. Their diversity is being increasingly documented, and so is their potential role in carbon export from surface to deep ocean. Bacterioplanktonic organisms are numerous and, as sustainers of primary and heterotrophic production in the Mediterranean Sea, they also are hard competitors towards depleted resources like nutrients. Competitive abilities impact both bacterioplanktonic diversity and functionality. Are microorganisms getting adapted to ecological niches or do they develop physiological strategies to fit in rapid environmental changes? Our study focuses on the Mediterranean Sea that was investigated from East to West during the BOUM cruise in summer 2008. The distribution of bacterioplanktonic organisms was examined through flow cytometry (FCM), more specific groups of heterotrophic prokaryotes were targeted using a fluorescent in situ hybridization technique, and the heterotrophic activity of specific population was accessible thanks to a combination of radiolabeling and cell sorting techniques. At a station in the South West of Sardina, maximum abundances of Prochlorococcus and heterotrophic prokaryotes were met on the whole transect. The diversity of heterotrophic prokaryotes was not clearly dominated by one but shared among 3-4 phylogenetic groups. Abundances of FCM-enumerated organisms linked to their cellular 3 H-Leucine incorporation rates showed the contribution of each sorted population to the total heterotrophic production. The assumed autotrophic nature of cyanobacterial cells was misleading as it was recently observed on natural samples from the North Atlantic and North Pacific Subtropical Gyres: at some layers, cyanobacteria contributed up to 50% to the heterotrophic production. Would mixotrophy be a key to survival in oligotrophic environments? GROWTH RATES OF DIFFERENT PHYLOGENETIC BACTERIOPLANKTON GROUPS IN A COASTAL UPWELLING SYSTEM TEIRA E.1, S. MARTÍNEZ-GARCÍA1, C. LØNBORG2,3 AND X. A. ÁLVAREZ-SALGADO2 1 Departamento de Ecoloxía e Bioloxía Animal, Universidade de Vigo, 36310 Vigo, Spain CSIC, Instituto de Investigacións Mariñas, Eduardo Cabello 6, 36208 Vigo, Spain 3 Scottish Association for Marine Science, Oban, Argyll, PA37 1QA, United Kingdom 2 Microbial degradation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in planktonic ecosystems is carried out by diverse prokaryotic communities, whose growth rates and patterns of DOM utilization modulate carbon and nutrient biogeochemical cycles at local and global scales. Nine dilution experiments (September 2007 to June 2008) were conducted with surface water from the highly productive coastal upwelling system of the Ría de Vigo (NW Iberian Peninsula) to estimate bacterial growth rates of six relevant marine bacterial groups: Roseobacter, SAR11, Betaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria, SAR86 and Bacteroidetes. Surprisingly, SAR11 dominated over the other bacterial groups in autumn, likely associated to the entry of nutrient-rich, DOC-poor Eastern North Atlantic Central Water (ENACW) into the embayment. Roseobacter and SAR11 showed significantly opposing growth characteristics. SAR11 consistently grows at low rates (range 0.19-0.71 d-1), whilst Roseobacter, has a high growth potential (range 0.70-1.64 d-1). By contrast, Betaproteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, SAR86 and Gammaproteobacteria growth rates widely varied among experiments. Regardless of such temporal variability, mean SAR86 growth rate (range 0.1-1.4 d-1) was significantly lower than that of Gammaproteobacteria (range 0.3-2.1 d-1). Whereas the relative abundance of different bacterial groups showed strong correlations with several environmental variables, groupspecific bacterial growth rates did not covary with ambient conditions. Our results suggest that different bacterial groups exhibit characteristic growth rates, and, consequently, distinct competitive abilities to succeed under contrasting environmental conditions. CAN WE LINK METAGENOME GENE CONTENT AND IRON SUPPLY IN THE OCEAN ? TOULZA E.1,2, A. TAGLIABUE3, L. BOPP3, S. BLAIN1,4 AND G. PIGANEAU1,2 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, FRE3355, BIOM, UMR7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, FRE3355, BIOM, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 3 IPSL/Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l’Environnement, CEN de Saclay, Bât. 701 l’Orme des Merisiers, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France 4 CNRS, UMR7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France Iron is a rare ressouce in many oceanic areas and consequently its bioavilability often limits the growth of marine microorganisms. To investigate the link between iron availability and sequence prevalence in the environment, we performed a gene centric meta-analysis of available oceanic metagenomic data. We listed 96 genes involved in iron metabolism from the literature to build a non redundant database of 2357 sequences (limited to one per genus) corresponding to 8 metabolic pathways: inorganic iron uptake, Heme-Fe metabolism, siderophore synthesis and uptake, storage of iron, regulation, iron and oxidative stress. We used protein sequences of all available species (both from GenBank and from the Moore foundation microbial isolates) to span the large phylogenetic diversity of microorganisms. We performed a sequence similarity blast based search to identify the genomic basis of iron uptake strategy in 72 metagenomic samples. Iron concentrations and other environmental parameters of the sampling sites were estimated from ocean general circulation and biogeochemistry model NEMO-PISCES. We used multivariate statistical analysis to relate the amount and the prevalence of iron metabolism genes to environmental factors. This approach will provide new insights into the structure and gene content adaptation of bacterial communities in response to iron deprivation. BACTERIAL ASSEMBLAGE STRUCTURE AND CARBON METABOLISM ACROSS AN LATITUDINAL TRANSECT ATLANTIC VARELA M. M.1,2, V. BALAGUÉ3, A. BODE1, A. CALVO-DÍAZ4, Á. CID2, J. GASOL3, E. MARAÑÓN5 4 AND X.-G. MORÁN 1 Centro Oceanográfico da Coruña, Instituto Español de Oceanografía. Paseo Marítimo Alcalde Fco. Vázquez, 10 15001 A Coruña, Spain 2 Departamento de Biología Celular y Molecular, Universidade da Coruña, Rúa Alejandro de la Sota nº 1, 15008 A Coruña, Spain 3 Institut de Ciències del Mar-CMIMA, CSIC Departament de Biologia Marina i Oceanografia. Pg Marítim de la Barceloneta 37-49, E08003 Barcelona, Cataluña, Spain 4 Centro Oceanográfico de Gijón, Instituto Español de Oceanografía, Avenida Príncipe de Asturias, 70 bis, 33212 Gijón, Spain 5 Departamento Ecoloxía e Bioloxía Animal, Universidade de Vigo, Campus Lagoas-Marcosende 36310-Vigo, Spain Bacterioplankton contribute significantly to marine biogeochemical cycles, being responsible for a large fraction of the respiration and dissolved organic matter (DOM) remineralisation in the ocean. Nevertheless, little effort has been aimed at the study of the linkage between carbon processing and the structure of the bacterial community. To investigate this issue, we conducted a set of dilution culture experiments along a latitudinal transect (26ºN-34ºS) in the Atlantic Ocean during NovemberDecember 2007. We measured the latitudinal variability of empirical Leucine-to-carbon conversion factor along with bacterial respiration. Furthermore, the phylogenetic composition of bacterioplankton was followed in the time-series dilution cultures by using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) as well as fluorescence in situ hybridization (CARD-FISH). As expected, a rapid activation of bacteria occurred during the experiments. Molecular techniques (DGGE) showed that the community developed in the dilution culture was significantly different from that in the initial water sample. In the original samples, CARD-FISH-detected cells were dominated by SAR11 type (31%), whereas in the dilution culture Gammaproteobacteria (46%) dominated from day 2 onwards. Empirical bacterial carbon-to-leucine (Leu) conversion factors ranged from 0.12-0.51 Kg C mol Leu-1 and did not show any latitudinal pattern. We found high percentages of Leu respiration, possibly causing low conversion factors. Our study reveals that short-term changes in the bacterioplankton community structure bacterial did not translated into large shifts in carbon use, at least in the range of temperature found along the latitudinal transect. COMPARISON OF DIEL GENE EXPRESSION PROFILES IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC HIGH-ALTITUDE LAKE AND TWO MARINE SYSTEMS THROUGH METRANSCRIPTOMICS Vila-Costa M.1,2, S. Sharma1, M.A. Moran1 and E.O. Casamayor2 1 Department of Marine Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA Department of Continental Ecology-Limnology, Centre d'Estudis Avançats de Blanes-CSIC, Acces Cala St Francesc, 14, 17300 Blanes, Spain 2 Salinity is considered one of the main factors shaping bacterial community structure in aquatic systems, and its influence may also be reflected at the genetic and functional levels. In this work, we used metatranscriptomic sequencing to analyze day and night gene expression profiles of the bacterial assemblages from the oligotrophic high altitude Lake Llebreta (1620 m above sea level) in the Limnological Observatory of the Pyrenees (LOOP, Spanish Pyrenees, 42º 33’3”N, 0º 53’25”E). The goal of the study was to obtain clues about the main biogeochemical processes carried out by bacteria in a high altitude lake and explore unique biogeochemical features of this freshwater system. The results for Lake Llebreta were compared with two previous diel metatranscriptomic studies of marine systems, providing a perspective on ecosystems with greatly different salinity influences. We present some first insights into common diel transcriptomics patterns among bacterioplankton communities from marine and freshwater environments. A NOVEL CLADE OF PROCHLOROCOCCUS FOUND IN HNLC WATERS IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC OCEAN WEST N.1,2, M. SUZUKI 1,3 AND P. LEBARON 1,3 1 UPMC Univ Paris 06, UMR 7621, LOMIC, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651 Banyuls/mer, France 2 CNRS, UMS 2348, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France 3 CNRS, UMR 7621, LOMIC, Observatoire Océanologique, F-66651, Banyuls/mer, France The analysis of bacterial 16S rRNA gene clone libraries constructed from samples taken along the BIOSOPE transect in the South Pacific Ocean revealed a novel cluster of Prochlorococcus only present in two westerly stations close to the Marquesas islands (MAR) or in HNLC waters (HNL). This cluster formed a separate sub-clade within the high light (HL)- adapted Prochlorococcus clade. The abundance of this new clade and other HL-adapted clades was then determined along the BIOSOPE transect and in other HNLC waters in the Equatorial Pacific by qPCR using specific primers targeting the 16S-23S ITS region. The potential factors controlling the distribution of the new clade in relation to other HL-adapted ecotypes of Prochlorococcus will be discussed.