A Morphometric Approach to Understand Prokaryoplankton: A Study in the Sicily Channel (Central Mediterranean Sea)

Microorganisms. 2023 Apr 13;11(4):1019. doi: 10.3390/microorganisms11041019.

Abstract

A new understanding of plankton ecology has been obtained by studying the phenotypic traits of free-living prokaryotes in the Sicily Channel (Central Mediterranean Sea), an area characterised by oligotrophic conditions. During three cruises carried out in July 2012, January 2013 and July 2013, the volume and morphology of prokaryotic cells were assessed microscopically using image analysis in relation to environmental conditions. The study found significant differences in cell morphologies among cruises. The largest cell volumes were observed in the July 2012 cruise (0.170 ± 0.156 µm3), and the smallest in the January 2013 cruise (0.060 ± 0.052 µm3). Cell volume was negatively limited by nutrients and positively by salinity. Seven cellular morphotypes were observed among which cocci, rods and coccobacilli were the most abundant. Cocci, although they prevailed numerically, always showed the smallest volumes. Elongated shapes were positively related to temperature. Relationships between cell morphologies and environmental drivers indicated a bottom-up control of the prokaryotic community. The morphology/morphometry-based approach is a useful tool for studying the prokaryotic community in microbial ecology and should be widely applied to marine microbial populations in nature.

Keywords: Sicily Channel; cellular morphotypes; environmental factors; prokaryotic cell size.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the Italian MIUR RITMARE (The Italian Research For The Sea) flagship project (2012–2016) in the frame of SP2-WP1-AZ2-UO05-D01, WP1. “Struttura e funzionalità della rete trofica microplanctonica per il sostentamento e lo sviluppo delle risorse ittiche nel Canale di Sicilia”. The STM-Short Term Mobility 2013 of CNR (AMMCNT CNR prot N. 0044896) supported the UFRJ scientific contribution. The accomplishment of the NOVESAR survey was funded by CNR-USPO Unit and by the Italian MIPAAF, project “Valutazione dell’impatto della pesca del bianchetto nei litorali siciliani con metodi innovativi diretti e indiretti” (PROGETTI DI RICERCA INVITO D.M. 4 LUGLIO 2011). Cabral AS was funded by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior-Brasil (CAPES)-Finance Code 001.