Award: OCE-1342694

Award Title: Dimensions: Collaborative Research: Bacterial Taxa that Control Sulfur Flux from the Ocean to the Atmosphere
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: David L. Garrison

Outcomes Report

We studied the biogeochemistry of an organic sulfur compound with an outsized impact on the ocean and atmosphere: dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP). DMSP accumulates in marine phytoplankton cells where it serves to counteract the high salt concentration in the marine environment and deter zooplankton predators. When DMSP is released by the phytoplankton cells (either by exudation or death), marine bacteria consume it and, depending on which of two pathways they use for degradation, release the sulfur atom in DMSP back into seawater or in gaseous form to the atmosphere. Our team learned that about half the bacterial cells in the surface ocean are able to consume DMSP, which is quite high in light of the wide variety of other compounds available to them in seawater, including other organic sulfur compounds that were discovered in this project. DMSP-degrading bacteria are spread across a variety of species, exhibiting considerable diversity in their phylogeny, which degradation genes they carry, their distribution in the ocean, and the phytoplankton cells they typically associate with. However, only bacteria in one taxonomic group (the Alphaproteobacteria) have genes for both of the degradation pathways, indicating their particular importance at the crucial point in the marine sulfur cycle where the fate of DMSP sulfur is determined. The gaseous DMSP degradation product formed by marine bacteria, dimethylsulfide (DMS), is the largest natural source of atmospheric sulfur. It contributes to aerosols and acts as cloud condensation nuclei, affecting Earth's cloud cover. Last Modified: 01/25/2020 Submitted by: Mary Ann Moran
DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Environmental data collected by CTD during a deployment of the Environmental Sample Processor (ESP) in Fall, 2014 in Monterey Bay, CA2016-10-25Final no updates expected
Dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) concentrations and turnover during a deployment of the Environmental Sample Processor in Fall, 2014 in Monterey Bay, CA2016-10-25Final no updates expected
Taxonomy and abundance of microbial cells (phytoplankon and heterotrophic bacteria) during a deployment of the Environmental Sample Processor (ESP) in Fall, 2014 in Monterey Bay, CA2016-10-25Final no updates expected
Cell abundance, nutrient and DMSP concentrations measured during a mesocosm study of the effect of phytoplankton composition on bacterial DMSP transformation (OceanSulfurFluxBact project)2016-10-25Final no updates expected
Transcriptional profile of marine bacterium Ruegeria pomeroyi in a three-member co-culture study2017-11-29Final no updates expected
Environmental data collected during a deployment of the Environmental Sample Processor (ESP) in Fall, 2014 in Monterey Bay, CA2019-01-22Data not available
Metagenomic, and single cell sequencing data from a Fall 2014 ESP deployment in Monterey Bay, CA2019-01-22Data not available
Metagenomic, metatranscriptomic, and single cell sequencing data from an Environmental Sample Processor deployment in Monterey Bay, CA in 2016.2020-03-20Final no updates expected
Environmental data from CTD during the Fall 2016 ESP deployment in Monterey Bay, CA2019-02-20Final no updates expected
Environmental data from Niskin bottle sampling during the Fall 2016 ESP deployment in Monterey Bay, CA2019-11-08Final no updates expected

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People

Principal Investigator: Mary Ann Moran (University of Georgia Research Foundation Inc)

Co-Principal Investigator: William B Whitman