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12.4: Studying Microbes in the Ocean

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    51739
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    The study of how microbes exist within their intricate communities and the impact they have on biogeochemical cycling continue to reveal how much we still have to learn about the vast array of life living hidden beneath the ocean’s surface. Advances in science, specifically DNA technology, has led to affordable and accurate methods of determining the exact DNA sequence (or genetic code) of an organism. Metagenomics, a type of DNA sequencing, is used to reconstruct the genetic makeup of all of the organisms in a sample (CC19). Metagenomic studies can tell us what organisms are there and what they are capable of doing but can’t tell us if they are actually doing it. Metagenomic studies have revealed a vast array of microbes in marine environments, many of which have never been identified let alone cultured in the lab. The Tara Oceans Expedition took place from September 2009 to March 2012 and is one of the largest efforts to capture microbial life to date. Samples were collected from all major oceans across 210 sampling stations and over 35,000 oceanic samples. The data collected from this study has provided an immense amount of data resulting in over 100 scientific publications, and new information is still being gleaned from this research even today. The study cataloged over 150 million genes from microbes and classified over 100,000 plankton species. Through studies like this and the use of technology like metagenomics and other sequencing technologies (e.g., amplicon sequencing, metatranscriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics), an open-source database of ocean microbes named KMAP Global Ocean Gene Catalog 1.0 was established in 2024 with the goal of creating a comprehensive collection of the microbes living in the ocean. 

    While we have learned a lot from metagenomics and other sequencing approaches (e.g., amplicon sequencing, metatranscriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics; see CC19), there is still a lot to be learned. This will require additional sampling efforts, cross-disciplinary research projects, and modeling efforts.


    12.4: Studying Microbes in the Ocean is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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