Ocean microbes Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 5 ocean basins?

A

Arctic, Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Southern (Antarctic ocean)

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2
Q

Oceanic islands

A

Typically a result of volcanic activity and not associated with the continental shelf

Often isolated with endemic flora/fauna

Productive marine environment (local upwelling)

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3
Q

What are oceanic islands hotspots for?

A

Evolutionary novelty

Hawaiian Bobtail Squid (Euprymna scolopes) - Uses bioluminescence for counter-shading at night

Luminescence derived from Vibrio fischeri hosted within specialised light organ - chromatophores

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4
Q

What are abyssal plains?

A

Marine snow – dead decomposed things

Fuelled by ephemeral (occasional) nutrients

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5
Q

What are byssal plains?

A

Fuelled by allochthonous input from the water column

Highly ephemeral nutrient/ food

Specialised taxa - e.g. bone eating worms that burrow into whale bones

Worms have symbiosis with bacteria so they can digest bone

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6
Q

What are hydrothermal vents?

A

Extreme environments (e.g. high temperature, high H2S and CO2 concentrations)

Highly productive - fuelled by sulphur metabolising bacteria

Bacteria symbiotic with giant tube worms - bacteria metabolise so worms don’t eat anything

Riftia pachyptila harbour sulphur oxidising bacteria their ‘gut’ (trophosome)

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7
Q

How much water in the ocean what percentage does it cover?

A

98% of earths water is the oceans

Covers 70% of earths surface

Volume 1.3 x 10^9 km^3

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8
Q

How do oceans shape the planet?

A

Determinate of contemporary weather/climate

Reservoir for important element/chemicals (e.g. carbon, phosphate, water)

Source of atmospheric oxygen - allowing plants to grow - photosynthesis by the cyanobacteria

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9
Q

How much of global primary production occurs in the oceans? What does this impact?

A

(45%) of global primary production occurs in the oceans

Impacts atmospheric CO2 concentration - result of photosynthetic microbes

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10
Q

What are the limitations of ocean photosynthesis?

A

Confined to upper sunlit waters (the photic zone)

Challenging for organisms to survive - low nutrient availability

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11
Q

What is flow cytometry? What has it found?

A

Detects very small cells and their properties - Laser passes past cell showing wavelengths of light

Two cyanobacterial species dominate the worlds oceans:
Prochlorococcus
Synechococcus

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12
Q

Size, population and formation/ adaption of Prochlorococcus?

A

Cells 0.5-0.7 um

Unusually form of chlorophyll a/b

Global population - 3x10^27 - fixes 4 gigatons of carbon yr-1

Adapted to warm tropical, oligotrophic regions/mid latitudes

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13
Q

Size, population and adaption of Synechococcus?

A

1.5 um diameter

Globally distributed - 1x10^6

Everywhere but dominant at higher latitudes

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14
Q

How are Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus highly diverse and highly adaptable?

A

Ecotypic diversity

High rates of gene transfer between cells (horizontal gene
transfer – HGT)

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15
Q

What are ecotypes?

A

Ecotypes are genetically and physiologically defined subgroups of a species that occupy different ecological niches

E.g. differently adapted to light/temperature

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16
Q

How is Prochlorococcus ectopically diverse?

A

100s of ecotypes and highly flexible genome

Each cell 1,700 to 2,500 genes

> 80,000 genes across all know ecotypes (largest known pan- genome)

Enormous amount of genes

High rates recombination – maintains ecotypic diversity

Horizontal gene transfer by cyanophage – i.e. viruses (transduction)

HGT via production of DNA/RNA containing vesicles - Vesicles containing genetic material bind with other cells

17
Q

Why has the primary producer niche in the oceans has been filled by a couple of highly adaptable species rather than many different species?

A

Very low nutrient concentrations mean that advantageous to have high surface:volume