The Role of Ocean Currents in the Temperature Selection of Plankton: Insights from an Individual-Based Model
Authored by Ferdi L Hellweger, Neil D Fredrick, Sebille Erik van, Benjamin C Calfee, Jeremy W Chandler, Erik R Zinser, Brandon K Swan
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0167010
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
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Abstract
Biogeography studies that correlate the observed distribution of
organisms to environmental variables are typically based on local
conditions. However, in cases with substantial translocation, like
planktonic organisms carried by ocean currents, selection may happen
upstream and local environmental factors may not be representative of
those that shaped the local population. Here we use an individual-based
model of microbes in the global surface ocean to explore this effect for
temperature. We simulate up to 25 million individual cells belonging to
up to 50 species with different temperature optima. Microbes are moved
around the globe based on a hydrodynamic model, and grow and die based
on local temperature. We quantify the role of currents using the
``advective temperature differential{''} metric, which is the optimum
temperature of the most abundant species from the model with advection
minus that from the model without advection. This differential depends
on the location and can be up to 4 degrees C. Poleward-flowing currents, like the Gulf Stream, generally experience cooling and the differential
is positive. We apply our results to three global datasets. For
observations of optimum growth temperature of phytoplankton, accounting
for the effect of currents leads to a slightly better agreement with
observations, but there is large variability and the improvement is not
statistically significant. For observed Prochlorococcus ecotype ratios
and metagenome nucleotide divergence, accounting for advection improves
the correlation significantly, especially in areas with relatively
strong poleward or equatorward currents.
Tags
Distributions
Phytoplankton
growth
In-silico
Resource-allocation
Atlantic-ocean
Marine cyanobacteria prochlorococcus
Biogeographic patterns
Bacterial
communities
Synechococcus