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The impact of temperature change on the activity and community composition of sulfate-reducing abcteria in arctic versus temperate marine sediments

Robador, Alberto (author)
Max-Planck Institute for marine Microbiology,Biogeochemistry Group
Brüchert, Volker, 1965- (author)
Stockholms universitet,Institutionen för geologi och geokemi,Geochemistry
Jørgensen, Bo Barker (author)
Max-Planck Institute for marine Microbiology,Biogeochemistry Group
 (creator_code:org_t)
Wiley, 2009
2009
English.
In: Environmental Microbiology. - : Wiley. - 1462-2912 .- 1462-2920. ; 11:7, s. 1692-1703
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Arctic regions may be particularly sensitive to climate warming and, consequently, rates of carbon mineralization in warming marine sediment may also be affected. Using long-term (24 months) incubation experiments at 0°C, 10°C and 20°C, the temperature response of metabolic activity and community composition of sulfate-reducing bacteria were studied in the permanently cold sediment of north-western Svalbard (Arctic Ocean) and compared with a temperate habitat with seasonally varying temperature (German Bight, North Sea). Short-term 35S-sulfate tracer incubations in a temperature-gradient block (between −3.5°C and +40°C) were used to assess variations in sulfate reduction rates during the course of the experiment. Warming of arctic sediment resulted in a gradual increase of the temperature optima ( Topt) for sulfate reduction suggesting a positive selection of psychrotolerant/mesophilic sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB). However, high rates at in situ temperatures compared with maximum rates showed the predominance of psychrophilic SRB even at high incubation temperatures. Changing apparent activation energies ( Ea) showed that increasing temperatures had an initial negative impact on sulfate reduction that was weaker after prolonged incubations, which could imply an acclimatization response rather than a selection process of the SRB community. The microbial community composition was analysed by targeting the 16S ribosomal RNA using catalysed reporter deposition fluorescence in situ hybridization (CARD-FISH). The results showed the decline of specific groups of SRB and confirmed a strong impact of increasing temperatures on the microbial community composition of arctic sediment. Conversely, in seasonally changing sediment sulfate reduction rates and sulfate-reducing bacterial abundance changed little in response to changing temperature.

Subject headings

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Biologi -- Ekologi (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Biological Sciences -- Ecology (hsv//eng)

Keyword

Marine ecology
Marin ekologi
Marine Ecology
marin ekologi

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art (subject category)

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Stockholm University

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