Ocean microbes Flashcards
What are the 5 ocean basins?
Arctic, Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Southern (Antarctic ocean)
Oceanic islands
Typically a result of volcanic activity and not associated with the continental shelf
Often isolated with endemic flora/fauna
Productive marine environment (local upwelling)
What are oceanic islands hotspots for?
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
What are abyssal plains?
Marine snow – dead decomposed things
Fuelled by ephemeral (occasional) nutrients
What are byssal plains?
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
What are hydrothermal vents?
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)
How much water in the ocean what percentage does it cover?
98% of earths water is the oceans
Covers 70% of earths surface
Volume 1.3 x 10^9 km^3
How do oceans shape the planet?
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
How much of global primary production occurs in the oceans? What does this impact?
(45%) of global primary production occurs in the oceans
Impacts atmospheric CO2 concentration - result of photosynthetic microbes
What are the limitations of ocean photosynthesis?
Confined to upper sunlit waters (the photic zone)
Challenging for organisms to survive - low nutrient availability
What is flow cytometry? What has it found?
Detects very small cells and their properties - Laser passes past cell showing wavelengths of light
Two cyanobacterial species dominate the worlds oceans:
Prochlorococcus
Synechococcus
Size, population and formation/ adaption of Prochlorococcus?
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
Size, population and adaption of Synechococcus?
1.5 um diameter
Globally distributed - 1x10^6
Everywhere but dominant at higher latitudes
How are Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus highly diverse and highly adaptable?
Ecotypic diversity
High rates of gene transfer between cells (horizontal gene
transfer – HGT)
What are ecotypes?
Ecotypes are genetically and physiologically defined subgroups of a species that occupy different ecological niches
E.g. differently adapted to light/temperature