Mapping the Biogeography of Marine Bacteria
Download Maps and NetCDF Files from the Table Below
About the project
The rich tradition of mapping macroorganism diversity patterns and ranges
has been crucial for understanding the evolutionary and ecological processes
that shape contemporary biodiversity and for conservation.
Mapping bacterial diversity patterns and ranges will similarly clarify the
mechanisms structuring bacterial communities, uncover processes shaping global
diversity, and improve our understanding of the biogeochemical cycles and
ecosystem services for which bacteria are critical components. Unfortunately,
there have been impediments to constructing diversity and range maps for
bacteria, including most notably the geographically sparse sampling of
bacterial communities.
Here we solve this problem by using species distribution models (SDMs) to
construct global diversity and range maps of epipelagic marine bacteria from
a database of bacterial rDNA sequences that we complied from available marine
sampling studies. Our spatially explicit diversity maps reveal that epipelagic
bacterial diversity peaks in temperate latitudes during the boreal and austral
winters, and that these locations have low diversity during the boreal and
austral summers. The temperate, seasonally-dependent diversity peaks contrast
with the tropical, seasonally-consistent diversity peaks observed for most
macroorganisms. We also find that global hotspots of epipelagic bacterial
diversity occur in regions with high levels of human impacts to the oceans.
Our maps provide the first global picture of marine bacterial diversity and
ranges, and contribute to the expanding foundation of microbial biogeography.