Seawater warming rather than acidification profoundly affects coastal geochemical cycling mediated by marine microbiome

Highlights

  • The structure and function of coastal microbial communities are influenced by ocean warming and acidification.
  • Elevated temperature more profoundly impacts microbial communities than does acidification.
  • Warming promotes denitrification that may increase nitrogen loss.
  • The nitrogen, sulfur cycles, and carbon-fixation pathways exhibit distinct variation patterns under warming.

Abstract

The most concerning consequences of climate change include ocean acidification and warming, which can affect microbial communities and thus the biogeochemical cycling they mediate. Therefore, it is urgent to study the impact of ocean acidification and warming on microbial communities. In the current study, metagenomics was utilized to reveal how the structure and function of marine microorganisms respond to ocean warming and acidification. In terms of community structure, Non-metric Multidimensional Scaling analysis visualized the similarity or difference between the control and the warming or acidification treatments, but the inter-group differences were not significant. In terms of gene functionality, warming treatments showed greater effects on microbial communities than acidification. After treatment with warming, the relative abundance of genes associated with denitrification increased, suggesting that ocean nitrogen loss can increase with increased temperature. Conversely, acidification treatments apparently inhibited denitrification. Warming treatment also greatly affected sulfur-related microorganisms, increasing the relative abundance of certain sulfate-reducing prokaryote, and enriched microbial carbon-fixation pathways. These results provide information on the response strategies of coastal microorganisms in the changing marine environments.

Shan E., Zhang X., Yu Z., Hou C., Pang L., Guo S., Liu Y., Dong Z., Zhao J., Wang Q. & Yuan X., 2024. Seawater warming rather than acidification profoundly affects coastal geochemical cycling mediated by marine microbiome. Science of the Total Environment 957: 177365. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.177365. Article.


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