Data and code from an examination of growth rates of cyanobacteria co-cultured with a heterotrophic bacterium, Alteromonas, under either present-day or predicted future pCO2 conditions
Data and code from an examination of growth rates of cyanobacteria co-cultured with a heterotrophic bacterium, Alteromonas, under either present-day or predicted future pCO2 conditions
Date
2025-03-26
Authors
Morris, James Jeffrey
Entwistle, Elizabeth
Lu, Zhiying
Entwistle, Elizabeth
Lu, Zhiying
Linked Authors
Alternative Title
Citable URI
Date Created
2025-03-26
Location
Experiment housed in laboratories at Michigan State University
Lab work: Birmingham, Alabama and New York, New York. Field Work: Bermuda Atlantic Time Series.
Lab work: Birmingham, Alabama and New York, New York. Field Work: Bermuda Atlantic Time Series.
DOI
10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.925841.2
Related Materials
Replaced By
Keywords
Experimental Evolution
phytoplankton
ocean acidification
Heterotrophic Bacteria
phytoplankton
ocean acidification
Heterotrophic Bacteria
Abstract
The CO2 content of Earth's atmosphere is rapidly increasing due to human consumption of fossil fuels. Models based on short-term culture experiments predict that major changes will occur in marine phytoplankton communities in the future ocean, but these models rarely consider how the evolutionary potential of phytoplankton or interactions within marine microbial communities may influence these changes. Here we experimentally evolved representatives of four phytoplankton functional types (silicifiers, calcifiers, coastal cyanobacteria, and oligotrophic cyanobacteria) in co-culture with a heterotrophic bacterium, Alteromonas, under either present-day or predicted future pCO2 conditions. The data and analysis code in this dataset show that the growth rates of cyanobacteria generally increased under both conditions, and the growth defects observed in ancestral Prochlorococcus cultures at elevated pCO2 and in axenic culture were diminished after evolution. Evolved Alteromonas were also poorer "helpers" for Prochlorococcus, supporting the assertion that the interaction between Prochlorococcus and heterotrophic bacteria is not a true mutualism but rather a competitive interaction stabilized by Black Queen processes. This work provides new insights on how phytoplankton will respond to anthropogenic change and on the evolutionary mechanisms governing the structure and function of marine microbial communities.
For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/925841
Description
Dataset: The Long Term Phytoplankton Evolution Experiment: Culture Analysis