Diel and seasonal variations in abundance, activity, and structure of particle-attached vs free-living bacterial communities
were investigated in offshore NW Mediterranean Sea (0–1000 m). Attached bacteria were always less abundant and less diverse
but generally more active than free-living bacteria. The most important finding of this study was that the activity of attached
bacteria showed pronounced diel variations in the upper mixed water column with higher activities at night. Under mesotrophic
conditions, the contribution of attached bacteria to total bacterial activity increased from less than 10% at day time to
83% at night time. At high chlorophyll
a concentration, the highest cell-specific activities and contribution to total bacterial activity were due to free-living
bacteria at day and to attached bacteria at night. Under summer oligotrophic conditions, free-living bacteria dominated and
contributed to the most important part of the bacterial activity at both day and night, whereas attached bacteria were much
less abundant but presented the highest cell-specific activities. These diel and seasonal variations in activities were concomitant
to changes in bacterial community structure, mainly in the upper layer. The number of attached ribotypes was fairly constant
suggesting that particles are colonized by a relatively limited number of ubiquitous ribotypes. Most of these ribotypes were
also free-living ribotypes suggesting that attached bacteria probably originate from colonization of newly formed particles
by free-living bacteria in the upper layer. These results reinforce the biogeochemical role of attached bacteria in the cycling
of particulate organic carbon in the NW Mediterranean Sea and the importance of diel variability in these processes.