Warmer temperatures favor slower-growing bacteria in natural marine communities

ORAL

Abstract

Earth's life-sustaining oceans harbor diverse bacterial communities that display varying composition across time and space. While particular patterns of variation have been linked to a range of factors, unifying rules are lacking, preventing the prediction of future changes. Here, analyzing the distribution of fast- and slow-growing bacteria in ocean datasets spanning seasons, latitude, and depth, we show that higher seawater temperatures universally favor slower-growing taxa, in agreement with theoretical predictions of how temperature-dependent growth rates differentially modulate the impact of mortality on species abundances. Changes in bacterial community structure promoted by temperature are independent of variations in nutrients along spatial and temporal gradients. Our results help explain why slow growers dominate at the ocean surface, during summer, and near the tropics and provide a framework to understand how bacterial communities will change in a warmer world.

* This work was supported by Simons Collaboration Principles of Microbial Ecosystems (PriME) 54239 (J.G.), National Institutes of Health grant R01-GM102311 (J.G.), Schmidt Science Polymath Award (J.G.), and The Swedish governmental strong research program EcoChange (J.P.).

Publication: Clare I. Abreu, Martina Dal Bello, et al. ,Warmer temperatures favor slower-growing bacteria in natural marine communities. Sci. Adv. 9, eade8352 (2023). DOI:10.1126/sciadv.ade8352

Presenters

  • Martina Dal Bello

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Martina Dal Bello

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Clare I Abreu

    Stanford University

  • Jeffrey C Gore

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Carina Bunse

    University of Gothenburg

  • Jarone Pinhassi

    Linnaeus University, Kalmar