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Abstract The relative prevalence of endemic and cosmopolitan biogeographic ranges in marine microbes, and the factors that shape these patterns, are not well known. Using prokaryotic and eukaryotic amplicon sequence data spanning 445 near-surface samples in the Southern California Current region from 2014 to 2020, we quantified the proportion of taxa exhibiting endemic, cosmopolitan, and generalist distributions in this region. Using in-situ data on temperature, salinity, and nitrogen, we categorized oceanic habitats that were internally consistent but whose location varied over time. In this context, we defined cosmopolitan taxa as those that appeared in all regional habitats and endemics as taxa that only appeared in one habitat. Generalists were defined as taxa occupying more than one but not all habitats. We also quantified each taxon’s habitat affinity, defined as habitats where taxa were significantly more abundant than expected. Approximately 20% of taxa exhibited endemic ranges, while around 30% exhibited cosmopolitan ranges. Most microbial taxa (50.3%) were generalists. Many of these taxa had no habitat affinity (> 70%) and were relatively rare. Our results for this region show that, like terrestrial systems and for metazoans, cosmopolitan and endemic biogeographies are common, but with the addition of a large number of taxa that are rare and randomly distributed.more » « less
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James, Chase_C; Barton, Andrew_D; Allen, Lisa_Zeigler; Lampe, Robert_H; Rabines, Ariel; Schulberg, Anne; Zheng, Hong; Goericke, Ralf; Goodwin, Kelly_D; Allen, Andrew_E (, Nature Communications)Abstract The ecological and oceanographic processes that drive the response of pelagic ocean microbiomes to environmental changes remain poorly understood, particularly in coastal upwelling ecosystems. Here we show that seasonal and interannual variability in coastal upwelling predicts pelagic ocean microbiome diversity and community structure in the Southern California Current region. Ribosomal RNA gene sequencing, targeting prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbes, from samples collected seasonally during 2014-2020 indicate that nitracline depth is the most robust predictor of spatial microbial community structure and biodiversity in this region. Striking ecological changes occurred due to the transition from a warm anomaly during 2014-2016, characterized by intense stratification, to cooler conditions in 2017-2018, representative of more typical upwelling conditions, with photosynthetic eukaryotes, especially diatoms, changing most strongly. The regional slope of nitracline depth exerts strong control on the relative proportion of highly diverse offshore communities and low biodiversity, but highly productive nearshore communities.more » « less
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