Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-20-1999
Keywords
planktonic archaea; SSU rRNA hybridization
Abstract
Surveys using rRNA-targeted probes specific for the 3 domains of life (Eucarya, Archaea, and Bacteria) indicated the presence, and at times high abundance, of archaeal rRNA in a variety of water masses surrounding Antarctica. Hybridization signals of archaeal rRNA contributed significantly to that of total picoplankton rRNA both north and south of the Polar Front in Drake Passage. Late winter surface water populations collected around the South Shetland Islands also yielded relatively high archaeal rRNA hybridization signals, approaching 10% or greater of the total rRNA. Summer samples collected in the western region of the Antarctic Peninsula and at McMurdo Sound in the Ross Sea region of Antarctica yielded lower amounts of archaeal rRNA in the surface waters, and higher levels of archaeal rRNA at depth (150 to 500 m). The hybridization data were compared to biological, chemical, and hydrographic information when possible. In surface waters, archaeal rRNA and chlorophyll a varied inversely. The data presented here further supports the hypothesis that planktonic archaea are a common, widespread and likely ecologically important component of Antarctic picoplankton assemblages. The presence of these archaea in circumpolar deep water suggests a conduit for their circumpolar transport around Antarctica via the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, as well as their export to the deep sea, or to intermediate waters of the South Atlantic via mixing at the polar front.
Publication Title
Aquatic Microbial Ecology
Volume
18
Issue
3
First Page
263
Last Page
273
Required Publisher's Statement
© 1999, Inter-Research
Recommended Citation
Murray, Alison E.; Wu, Ke Ying; Moyer, Craig L.; Karl, Dave M.; and DeLong, Edward F., "Evidence for Circumpolar Distribution of Planktonic Archaea in the Southern Ocean" (1999). Biology Faculty and Staff Publications. 24.
https://cedar.wwu.edu/biology_facpubs/24
Subjects - Topical (LCSH)
Archaebacteria--Antarctica; Microbial ecology--Antarctica; Plankton populations--Antarctica
Geographic Coverage
Antarctica
Genre/Form
articles
Type
text
Language
English
Format
application/pdf