To test the influence of hydrostatic pressure on prokaryotic activity in the deep-sea, we adopted an in situ microbial incubator (ISMI) which is a custom-made underwater device developed in the lab of the MSCA-fellow’s PhD supervisor in Japan. The ISMI, as the name suggests, is an instrument to incubate deep-sea microorganisms at the depth of sampling and hence, without change of the hydrostatic pressure. During the project, the ISMI was deployed at a depth between 175 and 4000 m in the Pacific Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Atlantic Ocean, and Southern Ocean during three research cruises. Fourteen deployments of the ISMI revealed lower prokaryotic activity in the in situ incubations with ambient pressure conditions than under atmospheric pressure. Using fluorescence in situ hybridization coupled with autoradiography and microscopic observations, we found that only a few highly active Bacteria contributed considerably to the increase in prokaryotic activity under atmospheric pressure conditions, suggesting that decompression activates these bacterial groups and piezophilic prokaryotes are only a minor fraction in the deep-sea.
The results were presented at international conferences, symposia, and regular laboratory meetings, the latter to reflect on the progress in the work and discuss the interpretation of the results. To inform the general public how researchers work on research vessels, activities on board during the cruises were posted on blogs at University of Vienna (
http://medienportal.univie.ac.at/uniview/dossiers/dossiers-list/kategorie/1177/?no_cache=1(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)) laboratory webpage (
http://www.microbial-oceanography.eu(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)) and MSCA-fellow’s individual research blog page (
https://researchmap.jp/yutdein/?lang=english(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)). Information about the work carried out in the project is also given in the lab and MSCA-fellow’s webpages.