Abstract
The ocean has many underwater light niches, but the selection pressure
for chromatic acclimaters (generalists) compared to blue or
green-specialists is not well understood. Here, we tested the hypothesis
that changes in ocean spectra brought about by mixing on the order of
days preferentially selects for generalists within a
Synechococcus population. We investigated ocean conditions that
led to high proportions of Synechococcus generalists versus
specialists in a model ocean column, and compared simulations with
in situ metagenomic and physical oceanographic data from major
Bio-GO-SHIP cruises, supplemented with GEOTRACES and TARA Oceans, as
well as the GOOS Argo Program and sea surface height from AVISO. We
found that greater mixed layer depths selected for generalists in
simulated Synechococcus populations, but explained only 14% of
the partitioning between strategies in situ. Rather, variability due to
upwelling and ocean fronts had larger effects, explaining
~40% of the partitioning between Synechococcus
generalists and specialists in the ocean. Physical oceanographic drivers
therefore offer a significant selection pressure on marine
Synechococcus light-harvesting strategies. Our results motivate
further study of the in situ light environments of upwelling
zones and ocean fronts, which are currently understudied as potential
light-driven niche habitats.