Comparison of prokaryotic diversity at offshore oceanic locations reveals a different microbiota in the Mediterranean Sea

M. Zaballos(Universitat de Miguel Hernández d'Elx), Arantxa Là pez-Là pez(Universitat de Miguel Hernández d'Elx), Lise Øvreås(University of Bergen), Sergio G. Bartual(Universitat de Miguel Hernández d'Elx), Giuseppe D’Auria(Universitat de Miguel Hernández d'Elx), Jose Carlos Alba(Universitat de Miguel Hernández d'Elx), Boris Legault(Universitat de Miguel Hernández d'Elx), Ravindra Pushker(Universitat de Miguel Hernández d'Elx), Frida Lise Daae(University of Bergen), Francisco Rodríguez-Valera(Universitat de Miguel Hernández d'Elx)
FEMS Microbiology Ecology
February 13, 2006
Cited by 1,248Open Access
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Abstract

The bacterial and archaeal assemblages at two offshore sites located in polar (Greenland Sea; depth: 50 and 2000 m) and Mediterranean (Ionian Sea; depth 50 and 3000 m) waters were studied by PCR amplification and sequencing of the last 450-500 bp of the 16S rRNA gene. A total of 1621 sequences, together with alignable 16S rRNA gene fragments from the Sargasso Sea metagenome database, were analysed to ascertain variations associated with geographical location and depth. The Ionian 50 m sample appeared to be the most diverse and also had remarkable differences in terms of the prokaryotic groups retrieved; surprisingly, however, many similarities were found at the level of large-scale diversity between the Sargasso database fragments and the Greenland 50 m sample. Most sequences with more than 97% sequence similarity, a value often taken as indicative of species delimitation, were only found at a single location/depth; nevertheless, a few examples of cosmopolitan sequences were found in all samples. Depth was also an important factor and, although both deep-water samples had overall similarities, there were important differences that could be due to the warmer waters at depth of the Mediterranean Sea.


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