HPL Researcher Finds Seasonal Patterns in Arctic River Bacteria

November 24, 2009

New research on bacterial communities throughout six large Arctic river ecosystems reveals predictable temporal patterns, suggesting that scientists could use these communities as markers for monitoring climate change in the polar regions. 

"Our research shows that synchrony, seasonality and annual reassembly in planktonic bacterial communities occur on global scales,” says HPL researcher Dr. Byron Crump. “Since bacterial communities in big Arctic rivers shift predictably with circumpolar seasonal changes in environmental conditions, they may serve as sensitive indicators of climate change in the Arctic.”

The research team documents these patterns through a three-year, circumpolar study of planktonic bacterial communities in the six largest rivers of the pan-arctic watershed: the Ob’, Yenisey, Lena, Kolyma, Yukon, and Mackenzie Rivers.

The six river systems studied are comparable in size to the Mississippi River in the United States. While the researchers found that bacteria communities in all six rivers seem to be very similar, many questions still to be answered, such as how these bacteria communities might respond to a continued increase in temperature.

This synchrony indicates that hemisphere-scale variation in seasonal climate sets the pace of variation in microbial diversity. Moreover, these seasonal communities reassembled each year in all six rivers, suggesting a long-term, predictable succession in the composition of big river bacterial communities.

Divergence from this synchronous pattern may provide an early signal of climate change in some regions of the Arctic, and may result in changes to river microbial communities and the biogeochemical transformations that they carry out.

Data for this study was collected through the PARTNERS program, a collaboration among scientists from the U.S., Canada and Russia examining the largest rivers of the pan-arctic watershed. By including five of the world’s 25 largest rivers in the study, the results provide a unique perspective on global-scale patterns in bacterial diversity.

The research was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and shows that bacterial communities in the six rivers shifted synchronously over time, correlating with seasonal shifts in hydrology and biogeochemistry. It was supported by the National Science Foundation.

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