posted on 2015-09-15, 00:00authored byLemian Liu, Jun Yang, Hong Lv, Xiaoqing Yu, David M. Wilkinson
The
simultaneous analysis of multiple components of ecosystems
is crucial for comprehensive studies of environmental changes in aquatic
ecosystems, but such studies are rare. In this study, we analyzed
simultaneously the bacterioplankton and phytoplankton communities
in three Chinese subtropical reservoirs and compared the response
of these two components to seasonal environmental changes. Time-lag
analysis indicated that the temporal community dynamics of both bacterioplankton
and phytoplankton showed significant directional changes, and variance
partitioning suggested that the major reason was the gradual improvement
of reservoir water quality from middle eutrophic to oligo–mesotrophic
levels during the course of our study. In addition, we found a higher
level of temporal stability or stochasticity in the bacterioplankton
community than in the phytoplankton community. Potential explanations
are that traits associated with bacteria, such as high abundance,
widespread dispersal, potential for rapid growth rates, and rapid
evolutionary adaptation, may underlie the different stability or stochasticity
of bacterioplankton and phytoplankton communities to the environmental
changes. In addition, the indirect response of bacterioplankton to
nitrogen and phosphorus may result in the fact that environmental
deterministic selection was stronger for the phytoplankton than for
the bacterioplankton communities.