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OAS accession Detail for 0291312
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accessions_id: | 0291312 | archive |
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Title: | Diel, daily, and spatial variation of coral reef seawater microbial communities from US Virgin Islands, 2017 (NCEI Accession 0291312) |
Abstract: | This dataset contains chemical and physical data collected from 2017-08-01 to 2017-11-30. These data include Ammonium, Nitrate, Nitrite, SiOH_4, depth, reactive phosphorus (PO4), and water temperature. The instruments used to collect these data include Automated DNA Sequencer, Flow Cytometer, Nutrient Autoanalyzer, and Temperature Logger. These data were collected by Amy Apprill of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution as part of the "Signature exometabolomes of Caribbean corals and influences on reef picoplankton (Coral Exometabolomes)" project. The Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) submitted these data to NCEI on 2019-08-19. The following is the text of the dataset description provided by BCO-DMO: Coral reef seawater microbial communities Dataset Description: Bacterial and archaeal diversity and composition, microbial cell abundances, inorganic nutrient concentrations, and physicochemical conditions were determined and measured in coral reef seawater over a three-day, diel time series on one reef in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands. |
Date received: | 20190819 |
Start date: | 20170801 |
End date: | 20171130 |
Seanames: | |
West boundary: | -70.6731 |
East boundary: | -64.70403 |
North boundary: | 41.5265 |
South boundary: | 18.30204 |
Observation types: | chemical, physical |
Instrument types: | Flow Cytometer, nutrient autoanalyzer, temperature probe |
Datatypes: | AMMONIUM (NH4), NITRATE, NITRITE, phosphate, silicate, WATER TEMPERATURE |
Submitter: | |
Submitting institution: | Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office |
Collecting institutions: | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution |
Contributing projects: | |
Platforms: | |
Number of observations: | |
Supplementary information: | Acquisition Description: Sample collection: Five Porites astreoides colonies and a sand patch were selected and marked with flagging tape by divers on Ram Head reef (18º18’07.3” N, 64º42’14.5” W; 8 m depth in sand) in St. John, U. S. Virgin Islands. Colonies of various sizes (3 – 16 inches in diameter) from a range of heights above the seafloor (1 – 27 cm) were selected and these colonies were labeled A through E. Additionally, colonies were evenly distributed across the reef in order to minimize location effects (range of 3.6 to 14 meters between each colony). All colonies were located directly next to sand patches based on colony size constraints and the space needed for deployment of the custom made Coral Ecosphere Sampling Devices (CESD). Six CESD made out of aluminum strut material were deployed adjacent to each sampling location with sand screws. The last CESD was placed in a wide sand patch with no corals or benthic organisms located in its vicinity and this sampling location was used as a ‘no-coral’ control. Divers positioned the CESD so that a 60 ml syringe with an attached filter holder could be placed 5 cm away from the middle of the colony. Light and temperature loggers (8K HOBO/PAR loggers; Onset, Wareham, MA) were zip-tied to the end of each CESD and programmed to collect temperature and relative light intensity measurements every 5 minutes over the course of the three-day study. An hour after CESD deployment, scuba divers collected the first set of samples (Day 1, 3:00 pm). Filter holders were pre-loaded with 0.22 µm pore size Supor® filters (Pall Corporation, Ann Arbor, MI, USA) and were contained within sterile Whirl-pack® bags prior to sampling. Divers also descended with acid-washed polyethylene nutrient bottles (30 ml volume) to collect seawater samples for unfiltered inorganic nutrient analysis and flow cytometry. At depth, seawater samples (60 ml) collected for amplicon-based microbial community analysis were conducted at 2 different stationary locations relative to the CESD device (with the exception of collections completed at the sand-patch location). Reef-depth samples were collected first at the top of the CESD (2 m from the colony) in order to minimize stirring close to the coral ecosphere sampling area. To collect the sample, a diver attached a piece of acid-cleaned Masterflex silicone tubing to connect the end of the filter holder to the mouth of the syringe and then used reverse filtration to pull seawater through the filter. The filter-holder was then placed in an individual Whirl-pack® bag and sealed. After collection of microbial biomass with the syringe, a nutrient sample was collected. After collection of the reef-depth sample, a diver attached the filter holder to the syringe, slowly descended closer to the coral colony, but behind the CESD to maintain sufficient distance from the sampling area and then placed the syringe into the syringe holder located on the horizontal arm of the CESD. As before, the diver first collected the coral ecosphere sample (5 cm from the colony) onto the filter followed by a nutrient sample in the same location. Replicate samples collected for DNA analysis were collected from both seawater environments surrounding each colony on the first dive, but were not collected on the following dives due to time constraints. Surface seawater samples ( This sampling scheme was repeated at approximately 3 am and 3 pm for the next three days, totaling up to 6 sampling time points. Divers sampled each colony and collected samples in the same order (reef-depth followed by coral ecosphere) during all time points. After collection, samples were placed in a cooler equipped with blue-ice packs for the transit from the reef to the lab and then samples were processed immediately. Over the course of sampling, 85 seawater samples were collected. After the last time point, coral tissue was collected from each colony (close to the area where the coral ecosphere seawater was sampled) using a hammer and chisel and the CESD were removed. Sand was also collected in the location where the sand control CESD device was deployed. Sample processing: In the laboratory, sterile syringes were used to remove residual seawater trapped within filter holders and then filters were placed into cryovials, flash-frozen in a dry shipper charged with liquid nitrogen, and then transferred into a -20 C freezer. Seawater collected for flow cytometric analysis was subsampled from unfiltered nutrient samples and preserved with paraformaldehyde (Electron Microscopy Sciences, Allentown, PA) to a final concentration of 1% (by volume). Nutrient, DNA, and flow cytometry samples were shipped frozen back to Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and ultimately stored at -80 C prior to analysis. The coral tissue and sand samples were stored in a second dry shipper and ultimately at -80 C until they were processed. Macronutrient analysis and flow cytometry: Frozen and unfiltered nutrient samples were analyzed with a continuous segmented flow-system using previously described methods (as in Apprill and Rappe 2011). The concentrations of NO2- + NO3-, NO2-, PO43-, NH4+, and silicate were measured in all of the samples. Nitrate concentrations were obtained by subtracting the nitrite concentration from the nitrite + nitrate measurements for each sample. Samples collected for flow cytometry were analyzed using colinear analysis (laser excitation wavelength of 488 nm, UV) on an Altra flow cytometer (Beckman Coulter, Pasadena, CA.). Unstained subsamples were used to enumerate the abundances of picocyanobacteria (Prochlorococcus, Synechococcus) and picoeukaryotes. Stained (Hoechst stain, 1 µg ml-1 final concentration) subsamples were analyzed to estimate the abundance of unpigmented cells (an estimate of heterotrophic bacterial abundance) (Marie et al. 1997). FlowJo (v. 6.4.7) software was used to estimate the abundance of each cell type. The abundance of total cells was calculated by adding the cell counts obtained for each of the respective picoplankton classes together for each sample. DNA extraction, amplification, pooling, and sequencing: DNA was extracted from filters using a sucrose-lysis extraction method and Qiagen spin-columns (Santoro et al. 2010) Control extractions were also completed with unused filters (control filters without biomass) in order to account for contamination from the filters or extraction reagents. Lastly, diluted DNA from a synthetic staggered mock community (BEI Resources, Manassas, VA, USA) was used to account for amplification and sequencing errors in downstream microbial community analysis. Coral tissue was removed from the skeleton using air-brushing with autoclaved 1% phosphate-buffered-saline (PBS) solution (Apprill et al. 2016; Weber et al. 2017). The coral tissue slurry was pelleted using a centrifuge and the PBS supernatant was discarded. DNA was extracted from each pellet (300 mg of tissue) using a modified version of the DNeasy DNA extraction kit protocol (Qiagen, Germantown, MD). The lysis buffer in the kit was added to each tube followed by approximately 300 mg of garnet beads (from a MOBIO DNA extraction kit) and 300 mg of Lysing B matrix beads (MP Biomedicals, Solon, OH). The tubes were subjected to a bead-beating step for 15 minutes so that the beads could break up the coral tissue (Weber et al. 2017). After bead-beating, 20 µl of proteinase-k was added to each tube and the samples were incubated with gentle agitation for 10 minutes at 56 °C. After these modifications, the DNeasy protocol (Qiagen) was followed to complete extractions. Extracts were amplified with barcoded primers targeting the V4 hypervariable region of the bacterial and archaeal small subunit ribosomal RNA gene (Kozich et al. 2013). The forward primer: 5’ TATGGTAATTGTGTGYCAGCMGCCGCGGTAA 3’ (Parada et al. 2016) and reverse primer: 3’ AGTCAGTCAGCCGGACTACNVGGGTWTCTAAT 5’ (Apprill et al. 2015) were used, along with the barcodes, to amplify and tag each sample prior to pooling. We used forward and reverse primers with degeneracies in order to eliminate amplification biases against Crenarchaeota/ Thaumarchaeota (Parada et al. 2016) and SAR 11 (Apprill et al. 2015). Triplicate Polymerase Chain Reactions (25 l volume) were run with 2 l of DNA template from each sample using the same barcodes in order to minimize the formation of chimeras during amplification. The reaction conditions included: a 2-minute hot start at 95 °C followed by 36 cycles of 95 °C for 20 seconds, 55 °C for 15 seconds, and 72 °C for 5 minutes. The final extension step was 72 °C for 10 minutes. Triplicate barcoded amplicons were pooled and screened using gel electrophoresis to assess the quality and the relative concentration of amplicons. Amplicons were purified using the MinElute Gel Extraction Kit (Qiagen) and pooled to form the sequencing library. The library was sequenced (paired-end 2x250 bp) at the Georgia Genomics and Bioinformatics Core with a Miseq (Illumina, San Diego, CA) sequencer and raw sequence reads are available at the NCBI Sequence Read Archive under BioProject # PRJNA550343. Microbial community analyses: Raw sequences were quality-filtered and grouped into amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) using DADA2 (Callahan et al. 2016). Reads were filtered, trimmed, dereplicated and error rates were calculated using the program’s parametric error model. The DADA2 algorithm was used to infer the number of different ASVs (8357 distinct ASVs), paired reads were merged, an ASV table was constructed, and chimeras were removed (1% of all ASVs). Taxonomy was assigned to each ASV using the Silva v.132 reference database (Quast et al. 2013). Mock communities were used to assess the performance of the program as well as sequencing error rates. DADA2 inferred 15, 17, and 17 strains within the mock community (compared to the 20 expected stains present at different concentrations within the staggered community) and 13, 14, and 14 of the strains were exact matches to the expected sequences from the mock community reference file. Sequence recovery is slightly lower than expected, but is comparable to normal performance of DADA2 on this staggered mock community (Callahan et al. 2016). The R packages Phyloseq (McMurdie and Holmes 2013), Vegan (Oksanen et al. 2017), DESeq2 (Love et al. 2014), and ggplot2 (Wickham 2016) were used for downstream analysis of the microbial community. Sequences were not subsampled, but samples with less than 1000 reads (2 samples) were removed. In addition, ASVs identifying as chloroplasts were removed. Sequences representing ASVs that identified as “NA” at the Phylum level were checked using the SINA aligner and classifier (v.1.2.11) (Pruesse et al. 2012) and then removed if not identified as bacteria or archaea at 70% similarity. The average number of reads across all seawater samples used in microbial community analyses was 58,398 (± 32,184 standard deviation) with a range of 11,502 – 206,689 reads. The average number of reads in coral tissue samples was 38,096 (±23,854) with a range of 11,538 – 59,437 reads. DNA extraction control communities were initially inspected and then removed because they fell out as outliers compared to the highly similar seawater microbial communities. Taxonomic bar plots, metrics of alpha diversity (observed richness of ASVs), and boxplots of alpha diversity were made and calculated using Phyloseq. Alpha diversity was also calculated for samples after Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus ASVs were removed in order to understand how much their dynamics influenced observed richness. Constrained analysis of principal coordinates (CAP) based on Bray – Curtis dissimilarity was completed (using ‘capscale’ in Vegan) and variance partitioning was used to identify which of the measured environmental parameters significantly (p Statistical analyses: A Principal Coordinates Analysis (PCA) was completed to summarize changes in picoplankton abundances, inorganic nutrient concentrations, and relative light and temperature information collected from the HOBO loggers and reduce the dimensionality of this data. Separate PCAs were also generated using samples collected during either day or night to observe trends specific to these times. Kruskal-Wallis rank sums tests were used to test for significant differences (p |
Availability date: | |
Metadata version: | 1 |
Keydate: | 2024-04-19 17:17:53+00 |
Editdate: | 2024-04-19 17:18:11+00 |