Bacterial response to dissolved organic matter affects resource availability for algae

2005 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 472-481 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer L Klug

In aquatic systems, the presence of colored dissolved organic matter (DOM) may affect algal growth in numerous ways. This paper focuses on the effects of DOM on resource availability. DOM contains nitrogen and phosphorus, which may become available following microbial or photochemical degradation. Also, addition of DOM may stimulate bacterial growth, which in turn may change the availability of nitrogen, phosphorus, and inorganic carbon to algae. Experiments conducted in a moderately colored lake showed that the effect of DOM on algal growth depended on the amount of nutrients present in the peat extract and on bacterial response to DOM. There was evidence for competition for phosphorus between algae and bacteria in some treatments. In addition, when both bacteria growth and algal growth were high, bacterial respiration of DOM alleviated algal carbon limitation by providing algae with an inorganic carbon source. Thus, the degree to which bacteria are stimulated by the addition of DOM will affect the amount of phosphorus and inorganic carbon available for algal growth. These results suggest that part of the difficulty in predicting algal response to changes in DOM and nutrient concentration may be due partially to variability in bacterial responses.

Weed Science ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 492-497 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude E. Boyd

Bacterial production of CO2from sucrose substrate increased growth of seven species of algae in CO2-limited laboratory cultures. Decomposition of organic matter in pond water also supplied enough CO2to support good algal growth in cultures deprived of other sources of CO2. Estimates of CO2production from decay of dissolved organic matter in six pond waters ranged from 0.32 to 3.53 mg/L per 24 hr. The carbonate-bicarbonate equilibrium system is a major source of CO2for algal photosynthesis. However, in waters of low or extremely high alkalinity, this system will not support high rates of photosynthesis. In such waters CO2from decomposition will stimulate photosynthesis. Decomposable organic compounds must be considered with nitrogen and phosphorus as factors responsible for accelerated eutrophication and nuisance algal blooms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Andrew Robert Martin

<p>Productivity in the Southern Ocean reflects both the spatial and temporal dynamics of the sea ice ecosystem, as well as the complex cycling of energy through the microbial community. Marine bacteria are thought to be integral to trophodynamics and the functioning of a microbial loop within the ice matrix, but there is no clear understanding of the distribution and diversity of bacteria or the importance of bacterial production. Understanding the bacterial response to environmental change in the sea ice ecosystem may provide an insight into the potential changes to the physical oceanography and ecology of the Southern Ocean. In this study, a multivariate statistical approach was used to compare the distribution and abundance of bacteria occurring in pack ice at the tongue of the Mertz Glacier (George V Coast, Antarctica) with bacteria from fast ice at Cape Hallett (Victoria Land coastline, Antarctica). Estimates of bacterial abundance were derived using both epifluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry and correlated with algal and chlorophyll a data. Significant differences in the vertical distribution of cells within the ice were observed between the Mertz Glacier and Cape Hallett, but no overall difference in cell abundance was found between the two locations with 7.6 ± 1.2 x 109 cells per m2 and 8.7 ± 1.6 x 109 cells per m2 respectively. Bacteria and algae were positively correlated in pack ice of the Mertz Glacier indicating a functional microbial loop, but no discernable relationship was exhibited in multiyear ice at Cape Hallett. These findings support the general consensus that the generation of bacterial biomass from algal-derived dissolved organic matter is highly variable across seasons and habitats. The tetrazolium salt 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride (CTC) was used to investigate the bacterial response to experimentally induced changes in light and salinity in fast ice at Cape Hallett. Two distinct assemblages were examined; the brine channel assemblage near the surface of the ice and the interstitial or bottom assemblage. This study presents preliminary evidence that the metabolic activity of brine bacteria is influenced by light stimulus, most likely as a response to increased levels of algal-derived dissolved organic matter. No cells were deemed to be metabolically active when incubated in the dark, while on average thirty-eight percent of the cells incubated at 150 =mol photons m-2 s-1 were metabolically active. Additional results indicate that salt concentration is more significant than light irradiance in influencing the metabolic response of cells present in the interstitial region of the sea ice profile. When acclimated over a period of eight hours, cells exhibited a tolerance to changing saline concentrations, but after a further eight hours there is some evidence to suggest activity is reduced at either end of the saline regime. Bacterial metabolic activity in each assemblage is thus thought to reflect the fundamentally different light and saline environments within the sea ice. Metabolic probes such as CTC will prove useful in providing a mechanistic understanding of productivity and trophodynamics in the Antarctic coastal ecosystem, and may contribute to prognostic models for qualifying the resilience of the microbial community to climate change.</p>


2008 ◽  
Vol 59 (9) ◽  
pp. 780 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia A. Howitt ◽  
Darren S. Baldwin ◽  
Gavin N. Rees ◽  
Barry T. Hart

Photochemical degradation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) can influence food webs by altering the availability of carbon to microbial communities, and may be particularly important following periods of high DOM input (e.g. flooding of forested floodplains). Iron oxides can facilitate these reactions, but their influence on subsequent organic products is poorly understood. Degradation experiments with billabong (= oxbow lake) water and river red gum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) leaf leachate were conducted to assess the importance of these reactions in floodplain systems. Photochemical degradation of DOM in sunlight-irradiated quartz tubes (with and without amorphous iron oxide) was studied using gas chromatography and UV-visible spectroscopy. Photochemical reactions generated gaseous products and small organic acids. Bioavailability of billabong DOM increased following irradiation, whereas that of leaf leachate was not significantly altered. Fluorescence excitation-emission spectra suggested that the humic component of billabong organic matter was particularly susceptible to degradation, and the source of DOM influenced the changes observed. The addition of amorphous iron oxide increased rates of photochemical degradation of leachate and billabong DOM. The importance of photochemical reactions to aquatic systems will depend on the source of the DOM and its starting bioavailability, whereas inputs of freshly formed iron oxides will accelerate the processes.


1979 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1315-1320 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. Tison ◽  
A. J. Lingg

Under closed laboratory conditions, at non-limiting nutrient levels, the biomass of Anabaena variabilis. Anacystis nidnlans, Chlorella pyrenoidosa. and Selanastrum capricornutum increased with increasing levels of dissolved organic matter (DOM) as a result of bacterially produced carbon dioxide (CO2) and (or) cofactors. Oxygen (O2) produced as a result of algal photosynthesis was sufficient to supply the majority of O2 required by the bacterial community. The percentage of DOM utilized by bacteria which was subsequently incorporated into algal biomass varied with individual species indicating that the association between individual algal species and the bacterial microbiota varied.Under natural conditions bacteria could provide CO2 and (or) cofactors for algal photosynthesis which in turn supplies O2 for bacterial respiration. This mutualistic association in aquatic environments could result in an increase in planktonic and epiphytic algal biomass if other nutrients are available.


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