Pelagic microbial heterotrophy in response to a highly productive bloom of Phaeocystis antarctica in the Amundsen Sea Polynya, Antarctica

Heterotrophic bacteria play a key role in marine carbon cycling, and understanding their activities in polar systems is important for considering climate change impacts there. One goal of the ASPIRE project was to examine the relationship between the phytoplankton bloom and bacterial heterotrophy in the Amundsen Sea Polynya (ASP). Bacterial abundance, production (BP), respiration, growth efficiency, and extracellular enzyme activity (EEA) were compared to nutrient and organic matter inventories, chlorophyll a (Chl a ), viral and microzooplankton abundance, and net primary production (NPP). Bacterial production and respiration clearly responded (0.04–4.0 and 10–53 µg C L −1 d −1 , respectively) to the buildup of a massive Phaeocystis antarctica bloom (Chl a : 0.2–22 µg L −1 ), with highest rates observed in the central polynya where Chl a and particulate organic carbon (POC) were greatest. The highest BP rates exceeded those reported for the Ross Sea or any other Antarctic coastal system, yet the BP:NPP ratio (2.1–9.4%) was relatively low. Bacterial respiration was also high, and growth efficiency (2–27%; median = 10%) was similar to oligotrophic systems. Thus, the integrated bacterial carbon demand (0.8–2.8 g C m −2 d −1 ) was a high fraction (25–128%; median = 43%) of NPP during bloom development. During peak bloom, activity was particle-associated: BP and EEA correlated well with POC, and size fractionation experiments showed that the larger size fraction ( > 3 µm) accounted for a majority ( ∼ 75%) of the BP. The community was psychrophilic, with a 5x reduction in BP when warmed to 20°C. In deeper waters, respiration remained relatively high, likely fueled by the significant downward particle flux in the region. A highly active, particle-associated, heterotrophic microbial community clearly responded to the extraordinary phytoplankton bloom in the ASP, likely limiting biological pump efficiency during the early season.


Introduction
As air and ocean temperatures rise with global climate change, polar ecosystems are particularly vulnerable (Schofield et al., 2010) and changing rapidly (Stammerjohn et al., 2008(Stammerjohn et al., , 2015)).In the coastal Southern Ocean, where terrestrial inputs are negligible, phytoplankton are the primary source of organic matter to the marine system, and heterotrophy is directly tied to the annual primary production.Coastal polynyas are hot spots for both biological productivity (Smith and Barber, 2007) and air-sea exchange (Mu et al., 2014).Primary productivity in Antarctic coastal polynyas ranges up to 105 ± 22 g C m −2 yr −1 (Arrigo et al., 2015) while the open Southern Ocean (south of 50 °S) averages 57 g C m −2 yr −1 (Arrigo et al., 2008).In coastal areas, the Domain Editor-in-Chief Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene • 4: 000102 • doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102seasonal sea ice reduction induced by climate change is expected to enhance light penetration, which would increase primary production, but may also increase surface wind stress that would deepen the upper mixed layer (Ducklow et al., 2013) and reduce phytoplankton productivity (e.g., Montes-Hugo et al., 2009).
Primary production in Antarctic polynyas tends to be dominated by diatoms along the marginal ice zone, and by the haptophyte Phaeocystis antarctica in open waters (Arrigo et al., 1999;Alderkamp et al., 2012).Although P. antarctica has a unicellular life stage, in the photic zone of Antarctic waters it is most commonly found in dense colonial assemblages (Kennedy et al., 2012).Key questions relevant to the carbon cycle of polynyas include whether potentially high rates of net primary production (NPP) are matched by comparably high rates of heterotrophic activity, and what impact the microbial heterotrophs have on the export flux.In the Ross Sea Polynya, a high particulate concentration near the surface has been shown to yield large vertical fluxes of organic matter (Smith et al., 2011).
The Amundsen Sea hosts the most productive polynya (per unit area) in the Southern Ocean (Arrigo and van Dijken, 2003;Arrigo et al., 2015), yet it is one of the most remote and least studied.The Amundsen Sea Polynya (ASP) extends, on average, 27,333 ± 8749 km 2 (1997-2010 October-March mean open water; Arrigo et al., 2012), and up to 80,000 km 2 at its maximum extent in mid-January) and is only accessible by icebreaker for a few months during the austral summer (Yager et al., 2012).While iron (Fe) concentrations have been shown to limit phytoplankton growth throughout the Southern Ocean (Martin et al., 1990;Smith et al., 2013), the ASP receives substantial Fe inputs from ice-sheet-ocean interactions, which support the intense seasonal blooms observed there (Yager et al., 2012;Sherrell et al., 2015).
While there is some indication in the literature for rate limitation due to temperature, psychrophilic bacteria are primarily limited by dissolved organic matter (DOM) flux in cold waters (Pomeroy and Wiebe, 2001) and can clearly respond strongly to high-latitude phytoplankton blooms (Yager et al., 2001).Unlike in the Arctic, which receives a large DOM supply from rivers (Feng et al., 2013), Antarctic DOM supply is linked primarily to phytoplankton productivity, with secondary sources from ice sheet degradation and deep waters (Dubnick et al., 2010).DOM flux is also influenced by macro-and micro-zooplankton (Steinberg et al., 2004), which can be spotty and have low abundance in these regions (Dolan et al., 2013;Wilson et al., 2015).As part of the Amundsen Sea Polynya International Research Expedition (ASPIRE) project (December 2010-January 2011), our goal was to determine how the heterotrophic bacterial community responded to the dense, spring phytoplankton bloom.Here we report pelagic microbial biomass and activity in the context of an early season Phaeocystis bloom in the ASP and comment on the impact of the microbial community on the bloom's fate.

Methods
Sampling ASPIRE examined the polynya region onboard the RVIB Nathaniel B. Palmer (NBP10-05) between 14 December 2010 and 8 January 2011 (Yager et al., 2012).Here, we report data from 13 stations within and around the edges of the ASP (Table 1; Figure 1) where a full suite of inventory and rate measurements was obtained from the upper water column.A few additional data are reported for comparison from samples collected during a previous visit to the region onboard the Swedish IB Oden (OSO 2007-2008 Station 16; Table 1; Figure 1).
Ice concentrations at the time of sampling were determined from unprojected AMSR-E 12.5-km satellite images (see Mu et al., 2014).Open water duration (OWD) was computed from the number of days (since August 1) that each station exhibited less than 50% ice cover including the day that we sampled it (Yager et al., 2016).Over the course of ASPIRE, the average open water area (< 50% ice cover as observed from 26 daily images) was 49,160 ± 9,952 km 2 .
Hydrographic profiles and discrete water samples were collected from each station using a conventional shipboard conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD; Sea-Bird 911+) sensor and a 24 x 10 L Niskin bottle rosette sampler (General Oceanics).Potential temperature (θ) and salinity (S) were recorded continuously as a function of depth and at the time of Niskin bottle closure.Discrete water samples for microbial biomass and activity experiments were collected from 13 stations (Figure 1) at 5-7 depths in the upper 100 m, 1-3 depths below 100 m.Samples from Oden were collected similarly.Most samples (> 75%) were collected in the upper 400 m of the water column.Shelf water depths in this area range from 300 to 1600 m (Nitsche et al., 2007).

Inorganic nutrients, Chlorophyll a, organic matter, and primary production
Water samples for chemical and biological inventories and rates were collected at the same stations and depths as above and then processed for dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN = nitrate + nitrite + ammonium) and phosphorous (DIP), particulate and dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen (POC, PON, DOC, DON), chlorophyll a (Chl a), and primary production according to standard protocols (Knap et al., 1996).These data are more fully described elsewhere (see Yager et al., 2016).The 14 C-bicarbonate uptake rates for primary Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene • 4: 000102 • doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102production are considered net primary production (NPP) since 24 h incubations gave bulk incorporation into particulate cellular material.For this paper, we used principal component analysis (PCA) to convert the set of often highly correlated physical and biogeochemical variables into a set of uncorrelated variables called principal components (PC), against which we compared our observations of microbial activity.

Microbial abundance and activity
Bacterial abundance samples were collected in triplicate from Niskin bottles at eight depths per station, preserved using 1% paraformaldehyde, and deep frozen (−80 °C) until they were processed at the University of Georgia.Flow cytometry was used to count bacterial cells with SYBR Green nucleic acid stain (Marie et al., 1997).Flow cytometer abundance was calibrated with polystyrene beads and values were cross-checked using DAPI and epifluorescence microscopy (Porter and Feig, 1980).Abundance was converted to bacterial carbon (BAC) using a conversion factor (25 fg C cell −1 ; Simon and Azam, 1989).Precision was ± 3%.
Viral abundance at five depths per station was determined similarly using flow cytometry at the University of Copenhagen (Marie et al., 1999).Microzooplankton abundance was determined at three depths per station using microscopy (Goswami, 2004) or flow cytometry (Christaki et al., 2011; for details see Yager et al., 2016).
Bacterial production (BP) was measured in triplicate at eight depths per station using the microcentrifuge method for 3 H-leucine incorporation into protein (Kirchman et al., 1985;Smith and Azam, 1992;Ducklow, 2000;Kirchman, 2001).Samples were incubated for 4 h in the dark, at water bath temperatures set to within 0.5 °C of in situ temperature, with 25 nmol L −1 3 H-leucine, and then compared to killed controls.Initial experiments confirmed that the standard 25 nmol L −1 addition was adequate for the desired saturation (see for example Simon and Azam, 1989;Ducklow et al., 2000, Buesing andGessner, 2003) while achieving linear rates over 4 h (no induction).Following protein extraction, Ultima Gold scintillation cocktail was added and allowed to stand overnight.Incorporated radiation was determined using a Beckman LS 6500 liquid scintillation counter onboard for 5 min per sample.Activity measured in killed controls was subtracted from the sample values, eliminating any isotope adsorption to particulate protein.Activities were converted to incorporated leucine using specific activity and standard quench controls.Rates of incorporated leucine (pmol leu L −1 h −1 ) were converted to BP (µg C L −1 d −1 ) using a standard conversion factor (CF =1.5 kg C mol leucine −1 , based on 131.2 g-leucine mol-leucine −1 , 13.699 g-protein g-leucine −1 , and 0.86 g-C g-protein −1 ; Simon and Azam, 1989;Kirchman, 2001;Ducklow et al., 1992Ducklow et al., , 2002) ) that is lower than or equal to that used for the Ross Sea (Ducklow, 2003) and most other polar studies (see Garneau et al., 2008 and references therein).Isotope dilution was assumed to be ∼ 1 (or negligible, due to low DON concentrations), which is conservative (giving a lower BP per leucine incorporation).
Measurements of BP onboard Oden in 2007 were performed similarly, except that the filter method (Kirchman, 2001) was used with 14 C-leucine and larger incubation volumes (20 mL).
Size fractionation experiments were run on near surface waters (10-40 m) at Stations 13, 35, 50, and 57 to determine the extent of particle-associated growth.Water was gravity-filtered through a large (293 mm) 3-µm nucleopore filter and measured for BP as described above to determine the contribution to production by free-living bacteria.This value was then compared with the whole water sample and the difference was presumed to account for the production due to particle-associated bacteria.
A temperature sensitivity experiment was run for surface waters at Station 25.Triplicate sets of water samples were processed for BP as above (without size fractionation), but incubated at −1.5, 5, 10, and 20°C.

Total community respiration
Total community respiration (TCR) was measured in the surface (∼ 2 m), subsurface (10-40 m), and occasional deep (60-294 m) waters at selected stations (5,6,13,18,25,29,35,50,57,66) and onboard Oden in 2007 (Station 16) by examining changes over time of total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC; see Fransson et al., 2011).Briefly, whole seawater was collected into a sterile 2-L bottle and then dispensed aseptically without bubbling into six identical, sterile, 200-ml pyrex bottles with ground glass stoppers, sealed, and incubated in the dark within 0.5°C of in situ temperature.Pairs were fixed by adding 200 µl saturated mercuric chloride solution at 0 h, ∼ 24 h and ∼ 48 h; bottles were sealed with Apiezon L grease and thick silicone rubber bands, and then stored dark at 2°C until processed in Georgia.Total DIC was measured using a SOMMA and coulometer ( Johnson et al., 1993;Cooley and Yager, 2006) with accuracy established using Certified Reference Material and a precision of < 1 µmol C kg −1 based on duplicate sample runs (Dickson et al., 2007).Respiration rates were calculated by linear regression using all six points, except when the best linear fit and smallest error was accomplished using only the first four points.

Data analysis
With the complex dynamics of changing sea ice cover, wind mixing, and light regime, the polynya displayed a spatial mosaic of productivity rather than simple spatial gradients (see Yager et al., 2016).Data were arranged (e.g., Table 1, Figures 2 and 3), therefore, according to the estimated extent of the phytoplankton bloom, as indicated by the integrated DIN depletion (e.g., Yager et al., 2001).This value (DDIN 100 ; mmol N m −2 ) for each station was estimated by integrating total DIN concentrations in the upper 100 m compared to a baseline to determine the amount that had been removed.The winter baseline was determined locally for each station by the concentration of DIN observed at 100 m, which in the ASP was always below the euphotic zone and the base of the summer mixed layer (Tynan, 1998;Prézelin et al., 2000;Yager et al., 2012;Schofield et al., 2015).The DDIN 100 value calculated here does not include several corrections made by Yager et al. (2016) to account for water mass mixing, so we did not convert to carbon units and do not report DDIN 100 as net community production.This value is intended only as a relative measure for viewing microbial data over the bloom progression.
PCA was performed with the 13 environmental variables (year day, latitude, longitude, sample depth, temperature, salinity, DIN, DIP, POC, PON, DOC, DON, and Chl a) measured on 79 samples in the upper 100 m of the water column using R statistical analysis software (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, ver.2.13.2; http://www.r-project.org).
Our method of measuring TCR without pre-filtration (so as not to exclude particle-associated bacteria) meant that the rate also includes dark respiration by phytoplankton and microzooplankton.Thus, bacterial respiration (BR) was conservatively estimated to equal half of TCR, according to Ducklow et al. (2000).
Correlation coefficients (Pearson's R) were calculated according to Sokal and Rohlf (1995), and are reported with the number of paired observations (n) and the probability (p) of no relationship.Goodness of fit values (R 2 ) were calculated using linear best-fit regression using reduced major axis (RMA; Sokal and Rohlf, 1995) and Microsoft Excel.All color contour plots were produced using MATLAB statistical analysis software (2012), and the contour(f ) function.Interpolation between data points was allowed.
Unless otherwise mentioned, all data analyzed are for the upper 100 m water column.If a sample was not collected at exactly 100 m, a value for 100 m was interpolated from data just above and below, and all integrations were done to exactly 100 m.All standard deviations and standard errors of the mean reported were calculated using GraphPad Prism 5 for Windows (ver.5.04) or Microsoft Excel analysis tools (Microsoft Excel for Macintosh 2011, ver.14.3.9).When used to indicate variation of observed values across the region, averages reported below include standard deviations (± 1 STD), and the number of samples or rates analyzed (n); ranges and medians are reported for non-normal distributions (e.g.counts and small sample sizes).Standard errors (± 1 SE = STD / √n) are used when mean values are directly compared to each other.

Site description and sea ice
ASPIRE sampled the early stages of the 2010-2011 spring bloom (see Figure 1 inset) after the polynya had been open for about one month (Mu et al., 2014).When the ship entered the area on 14 December 2010 the open water area was 41,388 km 2 ; upon departure from the region on 9 January 2011 it was 72,081 km 2 (see Mu et al., 2014).The open water area peaked at 76,081 km 2 on 12 January 2011, just after we departed.For the 13 stations reported here (Figure 1), eight were in open waters of the central polynya, two (Stations 66 and 68) were in the pack ice, and three (Stations 5, 6, and 34) were under partial sea ice cover (Table 1); sea ice concentration on the sampling date ranged from 0 to 85% (Table 1).The polynya opened first in the southeast and then expanded to the northwest; open water duration ranged from 8 to 61 days (Table 1).Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene • 4: 000102 • doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102

Hydrography
Seawater temperature and salinity varied with depth and were strongly associated with specific water masses (mCDW, WW, and Antarctic Surface Water, AASW; Yager et al., 2012;Randall-Goodwin et al., 2015).Waters in the upper 100 m exhibited temperatures ranging from −1.8 to −0.1°C; deeper waters (> 300 m) were warmed (up to ∼ 1°C) under the influence of mCDW.The melting of seasonal sea ice, as well as that from icebergs and surrounding ice sheets (see Randall-Goodwin et al., 2015), caused a freshening of surface waters within the ASP (salinities ranged from 33.5 to 34.1 in the upper 100 m), which then led to stratification and warming by the sun.Surface mixed layer depths averaged 25 ± 19 m (Table 1).Strong winds generated deeper upper mixed layers (75-100 m) in some regions to the south nearer to the Dotson Ice Shelf (e.g., Station 57; Figure 1).

Nutrients
Dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) in the upper 100 m ranged from 7.3 to 31.8 µmol N L −1 and was dominated by nitrate; ammonium was < 2 µmol L −1 (typically < 1 µmol L −1 ) and nitrite was < 0.14 µmol N L −1 .The highest DIN values were found near the surface at Station 5 and in deeper water (80-100 m) at Stations 29, 57, and 66 (Figure 2A).The lowest DIN concentrations (< 10 µmol N L −1 ) were found in the upper mixed layer (0-20 m) of Stations 6, 35, and 50; Figure 2A), so we refer to these stations as "peak bloom," even though the regional bloom (as detected by satellite) likely continued for a few more weeks.Winter baseline values for DIN at 100 m ranged from 28.4 to 31.8 (average 29.9 ± 0.93; n = 13) µmol N L −1 .
Integrated nitrate depletion (DDIN 100 ) ranged from 58 to 740 mmol N m −2 (Table 1); it correlated significantly with longitude (R = 0.70; n = 13; p < 0.01) and sea ice concentration (R = −0.59;n = 13; p < 0.05) at the time of sampling (Table 1).These trends reflect the overall pattern of the polynya opening (from southeast to northwest; Stammerjohn et al., 2015) that resulted in larger blooms to the east at the time we sampled, particularly at the open-water stations (Stations 25, 29, 35, 50, 57) compared to ice-edge or marginal ice zone stations to the west (5, 66, 68).
When profiles were arranged in order of bloom extent (DDIN 100 ), DIN concentrations exhibited a clear pattern of starting high throughout the upper water column and then showing reductions first near the surface and then moving to depth with increasing DDIN 100 (Figure 2A).Station 57 deviated from the pattern by having the greatest DDIN 100 , but also reflecting the impact of extensive surface wind mixing that increased DIN concentrations near the surface.

Chlorophyll a and NPP
Chlorophyll a concentrations in the upper 100 m ranged from 0.02 to 21.8 µg Chl a L -1 , decreased significantly with depth (R = −0.67;n = 79; p < 0.01), were highest within the surface or near-surface waters of the central polynya, and exhibited a buildup that mirrored the pattern of DIN depletion (Figure 2B; R = −0.89;n = 79; p < 0.01).A subsurface maximum was observed at Stations 18 and 29.Integrated Chl a values for the upper  1).These integrated values also correlated significantly (R = 0.82; n = 13; p < 0.01) with DDIN 100 .Surface wind mixing at Station 57 appears to have dispersed the surface bloom to depth and decreased the Chl a concentration at the surface despite peak DDIN 100 .

Particulate organic matter
Particulate organic carbon (POC) concentrations in the upper 100 m followed a similar pattern to that of DIN and Chl a (Figure 2C), and were highest in the upper 30 m of the central polynya, exceeding 70 µmol C L −1 at some stations (e.g., Station 35).Surface wind mixing at Station 57 similarly seems to have also dispersed the POC to depth and decreased the POC concentration at the surface.Points of high POC concentration corresponded positively with Chl a maxima (R = 0.90, n = 79; p < 0.01), with the POC:Chl a ratios for individual samples ranging from 5.6 to 271 (median = 45; n = 66).The handful of extremely high POC:Chl a values likely reflect measurement precision as they were only found where total Chl a concentrations were relatively low (< 1.5 µg L −1 ).Particulate organic nitrogen concentrations showed a very similar distribution as POC (R = 0.98; n = 79; p < 0.01; Yager et al., 2016), with POC:PON ratios from individual samples averaging 7.1 ± 2.1 (median = 6.8; n = 66).

Dissolved organic matter
Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentration in the upper 100 m of the stations ranged from 53 to 127 µmol L −1 (Figure 3A) and did not follow the bloom pattern as well as POC described above.There was a general trend of higher DOC (> 100 µmol kg −1 ) in the surface waters at central polynya stations.While dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) concentrations were relatively low at most stations (below detection to 9 µmol L −1 ; Yager et al., 2016), there was a trend of higher concentrations in the surface and subsurface at high productivity stations.The correlation between DOC and DON on individual samples was weak but significant (R = 0.39; n = 80; p < 0.01).DOC:DON ratios in the upper 100 m of the stations ranged from 9 to 451 (median = 31; n = 69).Some stations showed a DOC spike at depth (70-100 m), without a corresponding DON increase.

Microbial activity
Bacterial production (BP; Figure 3B) in the upper 100 m ranged from 0.04 to 4.0 µg C L −1 d −1 (coefficient of variation on triplicates averaged 14%) and correlated significantly with NPP (R = 0.64; n = 83; p < 0.01).BP was greatest in the warmer upper mixed layer, with maximum values in the surface waters at Station 50 (Figure 3B), decreasing rapidly with depth.BP correlated strongly with PC1 (R = −0.88;n = 78; p < 0.001), reflecting very tight coupling between bacterial activity and the Chl a and POC buildup.The relationship between BP and DOC was relatively weak (as can be seen visually by comparing Figure 3A and 3B) although they were correlated significantly (R = 0.40; n = 71; p < 0.01).
Bacterial production also correlated positively with the small increases in in situ temperature (R = 0.67; n = 80; p < 0.01) observed in the surface waters as the bloom progressed (although this relationship could have been due to covariance with other bloom parameters, as temperature is part of PC1).This possible temperature sensitivity was further examined using short-term warming experiments at Station 25, which indeed showed that BP increased with small increases in temperature, but also showed the classical psychrophilic (cold-loving) temperature response of rates slowing down with too much warming (Figure 4).Warming near-surface waters (18 m) from in situ temperature (−1.5°C) to 5°C doubled BP rates (from 3.0 ± 1.1 to 6.0 ± 2.4 µg C L −1 d −1 ), giving a Q 10 value (Segel, 1975) of 3, slightly higher than the typical Q 10 of 2 (Kirchman and Rich, 1997).Warming to 10°C did not increase BP further (6.1 ± 2.3 µg C L −1 d −1 ), however, and BP dropped significantly below in situ rates when samples were warmed to 20 °C (1.3 ± 0.5 µg C L −1 d −1 ).
Size fractionation experiments conducted at four open water stations (13, 35, 57, and 50) showed that particle-associated activity tended to be higher as POC increased (Figure 6).Particle-associated activity was a small component (10%) of the total BP during the early stages of the bloom (Station 13).At Station 35, when POC was > 60 µmol C L −1 , particle-associated activity accounted for about half of the total BP.At peak POC and BP, particle-association accounted for a large fraction (∼ 72%) of the total: whole water BP (4.0 ± 1.5 µg C L −1 d −1 ) was significantly higher than that measured on the 3-µm filtered water sample (1.0 ± 0.34 µg C L −1 d −1 ).After the mixing at Station 57, when surface POC dropped below 30 µmol C L −1 , particle-associated activity dropped back to about half of the total BP, even though the bloom extent (DDIN 100 ) was greatest at Station 57.

Figure 6
Particle-associated bacterial produ c tion.
Particle-associated activity in surface waters from four central polynya stations (13, 57, 35, and 50) with increasing concentration of particulate organic carbon (POC; µmol C L −1 ).Bacterial production was determined for two size fractions: < 3 µm (black) and > 3 µm (gray).Error bars show standard deviations of the mean from triplicate measurements.Percentages indicate particle association.

Extracellular enzyme activity
Particle-associated growth required bacteria to use extracellular enzymes to convert POM to DOM that could be transported across their cell membranes.Hydrolysis of each of the fluorescent substrates proceeded in linear fashion over the time course of the experiments (data not shown).Of the four enzymes examined here, leucine-aminopeptidase had the highest rates by far (67-249 nmol L −1 h −1 ; median = 36) in the upper 100 m, with maximum rates observed at Station 13.Chitobiase, glucosidase, and alkaline phosphatase activities were all low, with averages (n = 9) of 0.261 ± 0.149, 0.358 ± 0.246, and 0.333 ± 0.335 nmol L −1 h −1 , in the upper 100 m, respectively.When all depths were included (0-1000 m), leucine-aminopeptidase activity showed significant correlations with BP (R = 0.47; n = 17; p < 0.01) and Chl a (R = 0.55; n = 19; p < 0.01), but the relationship with POC was weak (R = 0.25; n = 16; p > 0.05).We noted, however, that two EEA values from surface waters at Station 13 were very high relative to the other data.When these two data points were excluded, the EEA correlations with BP (Figure 7A) and Chl a strengthened greatly (R = 0.75 and 0.96, respectively) and POC correlated significantly (R = 0.96; n = 14; p < 0.01; Figure 7B).
Size fractionated leucine-aminopeptidase activity at Station 57 showed that a majority of EEA (57%) was cell-associated (0.2-1 µm), with most of the rest of the activity evenly split (18-19% each) between the two particle-associated size classes (1-3 µm and 3-20 µm), and just a small contribution (5%) from the dissolved (< 0.2 µm) fraction (Figure 7).A strong increase in chitobiase, glucosidase, and phosphatase activities (as well as MCA-L) was observed in sinking particles collected in unpoisoned sediment traps (data not shown), suggesting that those extracellular enzymes may be more important to the carbon flux to depth (Ducklow et al., 2015;Yager et al., 2016).

Respiration and growth efficiency
Bacterial respiration (BR) was very high, with rates between 10 and 53 µg C L −1 d −1 ; median = 25; n = 18), although BR did not correlate significantly with BP (R = 0.11; n = 18, p > 0.05) or any other single variable.The highest BR was observed in the marginal ice zone at Station 66, but the second highest was late in the bloom progression at Station 57.Such high BR relative to BP contributed to a high BCD (14-57 µg C L −1 d −1 ; median = 27) and a low BGE ranging from 2 to 28% (median = 11).BGE showed a weak relationship with PON (R = 0.52; n = 18; p < 0.05).

Sub-euphotic zone microbial abundance and activity
Below the surface 100 m, bacterial numbers declined only slightly (Figure 8A) and microbial activity was dominated by respiration.Over 99% of the integrated bacterial production for each station occurred in the upper 100 m (data > 100 m for all stations not shown).At OSO 2007 Station 16, which had integrated Chl a and DDIN 100 values (Table 1) similar to ASPIRE Station 50, bacterial production dropped to undetectable values below 100 m, but bacterial respiration was measurable to 500 m (Figure 8B and C).Integrated subsurface respiration rates for 2007-16 (64 and 60 mmol C m −2 d −1 for the 100-250 m and 250-500 m horizons, respectively) were comparable to those measured in the surface 0-100 m layer (69 mmol C m −2 d −1 ).With a greater DDIN 100 and POC export potentially enhanced by deep mixing (Yager et al., 2016), ASPIRE Station 57 showed much higher bacterial abundance and respiration at sub-euphotic depths compared to 2007-16.Respiration rates at 300 m were only about 20% lower than those measured at the surface of Station 57 (Figure 8C).The integrated subsurface respiration rate was higher for 100-250 m (545 mmol C m −2 d −1 ) than for the surface 0-100 m (369 mmol C m −2 d −1 ).The activities of sub-euphotic zone bacteria likely remineralize a significant fraction of the sinking flux of particles from the surface bloom (Ducklow et al., 2015).

Heterotrophy versus autotrophy in the ASP
As described above, bacterial growth (BP) was highly correlated with NPP, suggesting that microbial autotrophs and heterotrophs are well-coupled in this system, but the BP:NPP ratio was generally low across all stations (median = 6.1%; n = 83).A reduced major axis regression between BP and NPP showed a linear trend (R 2 = 0.48, p < 0.01) at the lower NPP range (< 40 µg C L −1 d −1 ), with a slope of 0.097, but when NPP exceeded 40 µg C L −1 d −1 the slope of the relationship "saturated", suggesting an uncoupling between BP and NPP at high NPP (Figure 9).
With BR added to BP, however, the bacterial carbon demand (BCD) became more significant relative to primary production.When rates from individual stations and depths were compared to each other directly, BCD:NPP in the ASP was high (median = 80%; ranging from 18 to 300%) and seemingly inconsistent with the greatly undersaturated pCO 2 (Mu et al., 2014) and large NCP (Yager et al., 2016) observed in the upper 100 m.The imbalance was likely a result of measuring the more effort-intensive BR at fewer depths, and primarily at the surface (1-5 m), whereas at 10 of 13 stations NPP was highest just below the surface (10-25 m; see Yager et al., 2016;Schofield et al., 2015).When we measured BR below the surface, or coincident with the NPP maxima, BCD:NPP tended to be lower (median = 29%; n = 8).
To account for vertical mixing then, we estimated BCD for the full water column of each station by applying an average BGE to each BP profile to estimate a full BCD profile.The resulting integrated heterotrophic demand was more in line with integrated NPP (median BCD/NPP = 43%; ranging from 25 to 130%), with the higher ratios coming from later-bloom stations (e.g., Stations 48 and 57) where algal biomass was very high and self-shading was likely causing light limitation in situ (Schofield et al., 2015).

Regional significance
The ASPIRE observations support the designation of the ASP as one of the most productive bloom systems in the world.During the early stages of the summer bloom in the ASP, Chl a concentrations (> 20 µg Chl a L −1 ) and rates of NPP (228 ± 71 mmol C m −2 d −1 ; Yager et al., 2016) were high and comparable to or in excess of maximum concentrations and rates reported elsewhere in the Antarctic coastal ocean (Holm Hansen and Mitchell, 1991;Vernet et al., 2008;Smith et al., 2014), as well as the North Atlantic (Martin et al., 1993) and coastal Arctic (Matrai et al., 2013).Maxima for both primary and secondary production were associated with the lower-salinity, warmer surface waters of the central ASP (for details see Schofield et al., 2015;Yager et al., 2016).NPP correlated significantly with PC1 (R = −0.57;n = 68; p < 0.001).Light limitation from self-shading likely impacted rates later in the bloom (Schofield et al., 2015).
BP in the upper 100 m of the ASP (0.2-4 µg C L −1 d −1 ) was comparable to or higher than most of the rates measured in and around the coastal Antarctic, including the Weddell Sea (0.1-7 µg C L −1 d −1 ; Billen and Becquevort, 1990;Vaqué et al., 2002), and yielded higher depth-integrated BP rates (135 ± 49 mg C m −2 d −1 ; Table 1) than all those measured at the Palmer LTER research site between 2003 and 2011 (< 70 mg C m −2 d −1 across all years and regions; Ducklow et al., 2012).Our conversion factors were chosen to be conservative, but even when their influence is removed, rates of leucine incorporation in the ASP (0.154-2.59 nmol L −1 d −1 ) were approximately double those reported in the nearby Ross Sea (0.240-0.940 nmol L −1 d −1 , as calculated from data in Ducklow et al., 1999).Including isotope dilution would further increase BP and BCD.Thus, these regionally high production values within the polynya suggest that the microbial community was highly active and growing in the low, ambient water temperatures (−1.8 to −0.1 °C).Temperature sensitivity experiments indicated the presence of an active psychrophilic community that responded rapidly to a few degrees of warming, implying that it could be responsive to but also possibly vulnerable to future climate change.

What processes support high rates of microbial heterotrophy?
In the Amundsen Sea Polynya, surface algal blooms are dominated by Phaeocystis antarctica beginning in December and reach maximum abundance in mid-February (Arrigo and van Dijken, 2003).In the neighboring Ross Sea there is a time lag of approximately one month between the phytoplankton bloom and the bacterial bloom, in part because of the slow release of labile DOC from Phaeocystis but also by the low production of DOC through limited grazing (Ducklow, 2003).This delay in the bacterial response is not a result of temperature inhibition (Kirchman et al., 2009), but rather of resource limitation (Carlson et al., 1999), and depends on the inventories of labile and semi-labile DOC (Ducklow et al., 2001;Ducklow and Yager, 2007).We did not detect such a lag in the ASP; BP ramped up with PP during this early part of the summer season.Since the ASP did not exhibit a large buildup of DOM in conjunction with other bloom-associated inventories such as POM and Chl a (see also Yager et al., 2016), there must have been either low DOM production or rapid DOM turnover by microbial heterotrophs.The rapid turnover scenario is suggested by the high rates of bacterial production that we observed.Bacteria living in close association with the Phaeocystis colonies (e.g., Delmont et al., 2014Delmont et al., , 2015)), could take up dissolved products directly from the phytoplankton, thus limiting DOM release to the seawater and detection at anything but low levels.A high DOM flux and rapid turnover may also explain high respiration rates and low growth efficiencies if luxury consumption by the bacteria occurs (Kirchman et al., 2009).
In the Ross Sea, about 89% of the organic carbon produced during Phaeocystis blooms was shown to be partitioned as POC (Carlson et al., 1998).Indeed, the majority of organic matter in the ASP is probably bound inside P. antarctica cells (Schoemann et al., 2005) and cannot be directly utilized by bacteria (Tang et al., 2001) unless the cells are in mutualistic association (e.g., Delmont et al., 2015) as discussed above.Free-living heterotrophic communities, such as those seen during the very early stages of the bloom, rely on phytoplankton extracellular release (PER) of DOM (Billen and Becquevort, 1990) or other processes that convert POM to utilizable DOM.If PER was low in the ASP, then alternate means of supplying DOM to support the observed high rates of bacterial production would include 1) grazing activities, 2) viruses that lyse DOM-rich P. antarctica, and 3) extracellular enzymes that breakdown organic matter associated with particle aggregates.These potential sources are discussed below.

Grazing activity and viral lysis
Grazing activities contribute significantly to dissolved and particulate organic matter fluxes in marine environments through sloppy feeding and excreta ( Jumars et al., 1989( Jumars et al., , 1993;;Steinberg et al., 2000Steinberg et al., , 2008)).Protozoan and metazoan grazers can play a vital role in microbial loop dynamics (Azam et al., 1983;Sherr and Sherr, 2002;Pomeroy et al., 2007), but large colonies of Phaeocystis are not readily grazed by micro-or mesozooplankton (Caron et al., 2000;Nejstgaard et al., 2007).Flagellate and protist abundances were generally low in the upper 100 m of the ASP, as were macrozooplankton abundances in the upper 40 m (Wilson et al., 2015).Low levels of microzooplankton grazers also characterize the neighboring Ross Sea Polynya (Tagliabue and Arrigo, 2003).While these lower grazer abundances would contribute little to DOM production, the lower abundances of microzooplankton may also reduce grazing pressure on the bacteria themselves.
Viral infection can provide another source of DOM to the microbial loop.As algae and bacteria are lysed by viruses, intracellular organic matter is released as labile DOM to the environment where it is available for heterotrophic microbial utilization (Gobler et al., 1997;Middelboe and Jørgensen, 2006).Ratios of viruses to bacteria in the ASP were similar to ratios observed during austral summer in the West Antarctic Peninsula (Karl et al., 1996), during an under-ice algal bloom in the Chukchi Sea (Yager et al., 2001), and in Atlantic surface waters (∼ 10), but low compared to Pacific ratios (∼ 40;Suttle, 2007).Viral abundances in the ASP correlated best with DON, perhaps reflecting their release in elevated numbers along with nitrogen-rich DOM following host lysis.They also showed a significant correlation with bacterial abundance (excluding Station 68), as earlier observed by Fuhrman (1999), but not with Chl a, implying more bacteriophage than phytoplankton viruses in the ASP.Viral interaction with and infection of bacterial communities also reduces BGE (Fuhrman, 1992;Middelboe et al., 1996), and we calculated low BGE in the ASP.

The role of particles
Large aggregates of living or dead organic matter produced during phytoplankton blooms are enriched in organic substrates and thus well known hot-spots for heterotrophic bacterial activities and the turnover of photosynthetically fixed carbon (Simon et al., 2002).The abundance of organic aggregates in the polynya system could partly explain high levels of bacterial activity in the ASP despite low observed DOM concentrations, similar to algal blooms in the Chukchi Sea (Yager et al., 2001;Hodges et al., 2005).In the ASP, BP was found to correlate with both PON and POC, and size-fractionation experiments confirmed variable degrees of particle association in open water stations.Particle association may be indicative of a mutualistic relationship between bacteria and living Phaeocystis (Delmont et al., 2014(Delmont et al., , 2015)), of the breakdown of dead or dying phytoplankton via extracellular enzymes, or of a combination of these phenomena.Determining which of these bacteria-particle interactions dominates, temporally and spatially, will be important for understanding the role of pelagic microbial heterotrophs in the carbon cycling of this region.Further analyses of bacterial community structure in the ASP (Kim et al., 2013;Richert et al., 2015) may help to resolve the issue, but it is already clear that bacterial taxa known for particle attachment and copiotrophy (consumption of high levels of DOM) dominate in the epipelagic zone of this polynya (Richert et al., 2015).
The positive correlations between BP, POC, and EEA suggest that bacteria were benefiting from extracellular enzymes (particularly MCA-L) that hydrolyze POM to more labile DOM.Particle association and the production of extracellular enzymes, which is generally more energetically taxing than a free-living lifestyle (Vetter et al., 1998;Deming, 2002), would be favored in a setting with limited sources of dissolved organic matter and reflected in a high fraction of pelagic bacterial respiration, both of which we observed.Bacteria in the ASP were diverting, on average, 91% of total carbon uptake to respiration.One explanation for this finding may be that the particulate matter was of low quality, as found in decaying cells, and provided a less than ideal substrate for bacterial growth.This idea is not supported, however, by the relatively low average POC:PN and POC:Chl a ratios in the polynya (7.0 ± 0.81 and 52 ± 20, respectively, n = 13; Yager et al., 2016) throughout this early summer bloom (with no significant relationship to increasing nitrate depletion; Yager et al., 2016).Proteinase activity, which dominated ASP EEA, could be linked to cell-associated utilization of high-molecular weight (HMW) DOM rather than POM, suggested by the high percentage of EEA activity in the 0.2-1.0µm size fraction.If the free-living bacteria are utilizing bioavailable HMW proteins (N rich) cleaved through EEA, such utilization would require more energy for enzyme production, hence low BGE.
High rates of BP can lead to low BGE when high fluxes of labile DOM are available, as could have been the case with either free-living bacteria or those living in association with the Phaeocystis colonies.Tight coupling between autotrophs and heterotrophs, combined with low bacterial growth efficiencies and high BCD, could reduce vertical export potential during the early bloom.Only after NPP exceeded the observed threshold (∼ 50 µg C L −1 d −1 ) was there opportunity for an autotroph-to-heterotroph temporal lag.Such a lag would allow for greater potential export from these polar surface waters and would support a more efficient biological pump later in the season.Mesopelagic respiration rates, however, particularly later in the bloom Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene • 4: 000102 • doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102progression at Sta 57, were high or comparable to other ocean regions such as the summertime North Atlantic (Collins et al. 2015) and could have significantly reduced the amount of fixed carbon sinking to great depth (Ducklow et al., 2015;Yager et al., 2016).

Conclusions
Our estimates of microbial activity in the Amundsen Sea Polynya reveal high rates of bacterial production previously unreported in polar marine systems.Despite relatively high Chl a and NPP, observed DOM in the ASP was low; any DOM produced by phytoplankton extracellular release, viral lysis, grazing, or hydrolysis was apparently taken up quickly by the bacteria.Micro-and macro-zooplankton abundances in the upper 40 m were low, suggesting reduced DOM release via grazing, although viral abundance increased with bacterial abundance over the course of the bloom and may have contributed to DOM flux.Rapid DOM turnover in the epipelagic was further suggested by low growth efficiencies indicating luxury consumption.Once the bloom was well underway, particle-associated activities seen at higher particle concentrations, support the idea of either a mutualism between Phaeocystis colonies and their heterotrophic bacterial partners, or a particle-associated lifestyle, in conjunction with extracellular enzyme hydrolysis of POM to DOM.Significant findings were that bacterial production was cold-adapted, and that there was no observed lag between bacterial activity and primary production.High bacterial carbon demand in the surface also characterized sub-euphotic depths, supporting other estimates of rapid mesopelagic remineralization of sinking particles from the bloom.

Figure 1
Figure 1 Map of study area.A map of the study area projected onto a MODIS image (2 January 2011) of sea ice (mottled white), glacial ice (solid white), and open water (black).ASPIRE station numbers and locations are shown in green; OSO Station 16 (from the Swedish Oden expedition in 2007-2008) is shown in yellow.Lower right inset locates the region relative to the Antarctic continent.Upper right inset shows timing of ASPIRE sampling effort relative to the 1997-2014 climatology of daily net primary production (NPP; mg C m −2 d −1 ; black) with interannual variability (gray) over the bloom season (October-March; modified from Arrigo et al., 2015).doi:10.12952/journal.elementa.000102.f001 Figure 2 Biogeochemical inventories thro ugh the bloom progression.Biogeochemical inventories versus depth, arranged by station and contoured according to increasing values for integrated nitrogen drawdown (DDIN 100 ): A) dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN; µmol N L −1 ); B) chlorophyll a (Chl a; µg Chl a L −1 ); and C) particulate organic carbon (POC; µmol C L −1 ).doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102.f002 Figure 3Dissolved substrate inventories and bacterial production through the bloom.Organic substrate and bacterial activity versus depth arranged by station and contoured according to increasing integrated nitrogen drawdown (DDIN 100 ): A) dissolved organic carbon (DOC; µmol C L −1 ), and B) bacterial production (BP; µg C L −1 d −1 ).doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102.f003 Figure 4 Principal component analysis.Distance biplot of principal components PC1 vs PC2.Grey numbers correspond to ASPIRE station numbers and depth.Red arrows show the loading of each environmental variable.All values shown are for the upper 100 meters.doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102.f004 doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102.f006Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene • 4: 000102 • doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102 Figure 7 Particle-associated extracellular enzyme activity.Extracellular enzyme activity (EEA) on MCA-leucine as a function of: A) bacterial production (µg C L −1 d −1 ), B) POC (mmol C L −1 ), and C) size fraction in surface waters at Station 57.Data in A) and B) derive from both surface (0-100 m; circles) and deep (100-1000 m; triangles) waters at Stations 13, 14, 35, 50, 57.doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102.f007 Figure 8 Sub-euphotic zone microbial activity.Deep profiles for bacterial abundance, bacterial production, and total community respiration at two polynya stations: ASPIRE Station 57 (solid gray) and OSO 2007 Station 16 (dashed gray).doi: 10.12952/journal.elementa.000102.f008 Figure 9 Bacterial production versus net primary production.Bacterial production (BP; µg C L −1 d −1 ) plotted as a function of net primary production (NPP; µg C L −1 d −1 ) showing the linear response at lower NPP and the saturating response above ∼ 40 µg C L −1 d −1 .Error bars in gray indicate ±1 standard deviation from the mean of triplicate measurements.A Reduced Major Axis (RMA) regression line (slope = 0.097, y-intercept = −0.14, and R 2 = 0.48) is shown (black dashes).All data are from the upper 100 m where NPP rates were measured; dark gray points are above the 40 µg C L −1 d −1 threshold and were not used in the RMA regression.doi:10.12952/journal.elementa.000102.f009