Interactions between marine bacteria: patterns, mechanisms and models
Dr. Daniel Sher, Department of Marine Biology, Leon H. Charney School of Marine Sciences, University of Haifa, Israel
Marine microorganisms perform one-half of the primary production on our planet, forming the base of a food chain that feeds plankton, fish and ultimately human societies. Laboratory experiments have suggested that some marine microbes interact through symbiosis, allelopathy, competition, and parasitism, but many questions remain: How common are such interactions in the marine environment? What are the molecular mechanisms involved? And what is the impact of these interactions in nature, on a global scale? In the presentation I will first describe a high-throughput method to measure the effect of microbial interactions between Prochlorococcus, the most abundant photosynthetic microbe in the oceans, and co-occurring heterotrophic bacteria. I will then discuss some insights on the mechanism of these interactions, and finally discuss our approach towards describing microbial interactions in mathematical models of ocean phytoplankton.