Table 2_Temporal succession and assembly of marine bacterial communities in Maxwell Bay, Antarctica during summer.docx
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-10 收录
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https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_2_Temporal_succession_and_assembly_of_marine_bacterial_communities_in_Maxwell_Bay_Antarctica_during_summer_docx/31811497
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IntroductionIn recent years, ecological feedbacks driven by climate change have become increasingly prominent. The polar amplification effect has made Antarctic ecosystems pivotal indicators for reflecting global climatic impacts. As core drivers of biogeochemical cycling, marine microbes play a central role. Therefore, deciphering their temporal dynamics and assembly mechanisms is crucial for projecting the trajectories of polar ecosystems. However, the intrinsic ecological processes regulating microbial summer succession, particularly the relative contribution of deterministic processes, remain insufficiently quantified.
MethodsIn the present study, Maxwell Bay, Antarctica—a coastal marine region heavily influenced by glacial melt—was selected as the model system. Surface seawater samples were collected sequentially during the 2022 austral summer, followed by 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and phylogenetic null model analysis.
ResultsOur results revealed a distinct shift in the assembly mechanisms of bacterial communities. In January, community structure was shaped jointly by stochastic and deterministic processes, with stochastic processes contributing a greater proportion to assembly. This state transitioned to the predominance of deterministic homogeneous selection (84.68%) in February. Mantel tests, followed by linear regression analyses, confirmed that this phylogenetic transition was driven by shifting environmental factors. Specifically, water temperature served as the primary influencing factor in January, whereas silicate and nitrate concentrations emerged as the key factors in February. Subsequent partial least squares path modeling (PLS-PM) and redundancy analysis (RDA) further validated these findings, demonstrating that the identified environmental variables collectively explained more than 50% of the observed variation in community structure. Notably, nitrate drawdown was significantly correlated with the increased relative abundances of dominant bacterial genera in February.
DiscussionBy quantifying the relative roles of deterministic and stochastic processes in microbial community assembly, this study demonstrates that environmental selection is the dominant factor mediating microbial responses to polar warming. These findings provide a mechanistic foundation for the development of predictive models for future marine biogeochemical cycles in polar regions.
创建时间:
2026-03-19



