Description from NSF award abstract:
Long-standing questions regarding the fate of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in coastal oceans require a better understanding of the network that links bacterioplankton metabolism with carbon transformation. These questions address uncertainties about the composition of the bioreactive DOC components transformed in ocean margins, and the role of bacterial taxonomic and genetic composition in determining the fate of DOC.
This project will infuse a new type of data into coastal carbon cycle research based on high-resolution chemical analysis coupled with bacterial gene expression measures. It will extend DOC process studies down to the single-compound level and bacterial activity studies down to the single-gene level, and integrate this information into existing bioinformatic resources for biogeochemical and modeling applications.
The specific goals of this project are:
1) To reconstruct major components of the network linking DOC composition, DOC turnover, and bacterial heterotrophy in the coastal ocean (the composition of the DOC pool, the major bioreactive components, the bacterioplankton taxa mediating transformations, and the bacterial genes and pathways responsible).
2) To test hypothesized network links for selected DOC compounds using a simplified system that queries individual DOC compounds against a complex natural microbial community.
3) To test hypothesized network links for marine bacteria using a simplified system that queries a single generalist heterotrophic bacteria against a complex natural DOC pool.
4) To verify predicted DOC-gene linkages that are most informative about heterotrophic activities of bacterioplankton.
This research addresses fundamental questions on bacterial mediation of organic carbon fate in the ocean and atmosphere. As such, these investigations linking the chemical changes in dissolved organic carbon with patterns of gene expression in coastal bacterioplankton communities will be of interest to scientists across several disciplines.
---------------------------
Note: The project acronym, SIMCO, means "Sapelo Island Microbial Carbon Observatory".
Lead Principal Investigator: Mary Ann Moran
University of Georgia (UGA)
Co-Principal Investigator: Dr I. Jonathan Amster
University of Georgia (UGA)
Co-Principal Investigator: Dr Ford Ballantyne
University of Georgia (UGA)
Co-Principal Investigator: Patricia M. Medeiros
University of Georgia (UGA)
Co-Principal Investigator: William Whitman
University of Georgia (UGA)
Contact: Mary Ann Moran
University of Georgia (UGA)
BCO-DMO Data Manager: Shannon Rauch
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)