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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Feb 1996, 694-701, Vol 62, No. 2
BJ Tibbles and JM Harris
Tritiated thymidine incorporation (TTI) into DNA was used to examine
bacterial production in two soil types from the Robertskollen group of
nunataks in northwestern Dronning Maud Land, providing the first estimates
of bacterial production in soil habitats on the Antarctic continent.
Although estimates of bacterial productivity in soils near to bird nests
(344 (plusmn) 422 ng of C g [dry weight](sup-1) h(sup-1)) were higher than
those for soils from beneath mosses (175 (plusmn) 90 ng of C g [dry
weight](sup-1) h(sup-1); measured by TTI at 10(deg)C), these differences
were not significant because of patchiness of bacterial activity (P >
0.05). TTI- and [(sup14)C]leucine ([(sup14)C]Leu)-derived estimates of
bacterial production were similar when incubations of 3 h were used,
although incubations as short as 1 h were sufficient for measurable uptake
of radiolabel. Dual-label incorporation of [(sup3)H]thymidine
([(sup3)H]TdR) into DNA and [(sup14)C]Leu into protein indicated that TTI
did not reflect bacterial production of in situ assemblages when
incubations were longer than 3 h. Isotope dilution analysis indicated that
dilution of the specific activity of exogenously supplied [(sup3)H]TdR by
de novo synthesis of TdR precursor could be limited by additions of
[(sup3)H]TdR at a concentration of 1 nmol per ca. 115 mg of soil. TTI
exhibited a psychrotrophic response to variation in temperature, with a
temperature optimum of ca. 15(deg)C and a Q(inf10) value for 0 to 10(deg)C
of 2.41.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Use of Radiolabelled Thymidine and Leucine To Estimate Bacterial Production in Soils from Continental Antarctica
Southern Ocean Group, Marine Biology Research Institute, Department of Zoology, and Percy Fitzpatrick Institute of African Ornithology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7700, South Africa
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