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Creators/Authors contains: "Larkin, Alyse_A"

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  1. Abstract Seasonal and El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) warming result in similar ocean changes as predicted with climate change. Climate-driven environmental cycles have strong impacts on microbiome diversity, but impacts on microbiome function are poorly understood. Here we quantify changes in microbial genomic diversity and functioning over 11 years covering seasonal and ENSO cycles at a coastal site in the southern California Current. We observe seasonal oscillations between large-genome lineages during cold, nutrient rich conditions in winter and spring versus small-genome lineages, includingProchlorococcusandPelagibacter, in summer and fall. Parallel interannual changes separate communities depending on ENSO condition. Biodiversity shifts translate into clear oscillations in microbiome functional potential. Ocean warming induced an ecosystem with less iron but more macronutrient stress genes, depressed organic carbon degradation potential and biomass, and elevated carbon-to-nutrient biomass ratios. The consistent microbial response observed across time-scales points towards large climate-driven changes in marine ecosystems and biogeochemical cycles. 
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  2. Abstract Prochlorococcus is the most numerically abundant photosynthetic organism in the surface ocean. The Prochlorococcus high-light and warm-water adapted ecotype (HLII) is comprised of extensive microdiversity, but specific functional differences between microdiverse sub-clades remain elusive. Here we characterized both functional and phylogenetic diversity within the HLII ecotype using Bio-GO-SHIP metagenomes. We found widespread variation in gene frequency connected to local environmental conditions. Metagenome-assembled marker genes and genomes revealed a globally distributed novel HLII haplotype defined by adaptation to chronically low P conditions (HLII-P). Environmental correlation analysis revealed different factors were driving gene abundances verses phylogenetic differences. An analysis of cultured HLII genomes and metagenome-assembled genomes revealed a subclade within HLII, which corresponded to the novel HLII-P haplotype. This work represents the first global assessment of the HLII ecotype’s phylogeography and corresponding functional differences. These findings together expand our understanding of how microdiversity structures functional differences and reveals the importance of nutrients as drivers of microdiversity in Prochlorococcus. 
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  3. Abstract Environmentally driven variability in the elemental stoichiometry of ocean plankton plays a key role in ocean biogeochemical processes. Recent studies have identified clear regional variability in C:N:P, but less is known about the environmental regulation of diel variability in plankton elemental stoichiometry. Here, we quantified the amplitude of the diel variability in C:N of surface ocean particles (<30 μm,C:Namp) across large latitudinal gradients in the Indian and Atlantic Oceans. We commonly observed diel oscillations in C:N and biome‐specific variability inC:Namp. Temperature emerged as the strongest predictor ofC:Namp, relative to the supply of nitrate. We propose thatC:Nampis positively related to photosynthesis and respiration and thus phytoplankton growth rates. We find that independent growth rate proxies and an ecosystem model support this hypothesis. In addition, the temperature sensitivity ofC:Namphas aQ10of 1.78 corroborating studies of phytoplankton growth rates. Surface communities across the Indian Ocean transect had a very small dependency on nitrate, whereas recycled nitrogen sources were by far the most preferred and the ratio of recycled‐N:nitrate utilization increased with increasingC:Namp. To predict future changes inC:Namp, we combined our statistical model with data from the fifth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project for the years 1990 and 2090. The results suggest that future rising temperatures will yield increasedC:Namp. Collectively, our results imply that rising surface ocean temperatures lead to elevated phytoplankton growth rates supported by recycled nutrients. 
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