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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Feb 1997, 420-426, Vol 63, No. 2
JL Pinckney and HW Paerl
Simultaneous measurements of photosynthesis (both oxygenic and anoxygenic)
and N(inf2) fixation were conducted to discern the relationships between
photosynthesis, N(inf2) fixation, and environmental factors potentially
regulating these processes in microbial mats in a tropical hypersaline
lagoon (Salt Pond, San Salvador Island, Bahamas). Major photoautotrophs
included cyanobacteria, purple phototrophic bacteria, and diatoms.
Chemosystematic photopigments were used as indicators of the relative
abundance of mat phototrophs. Experimental manipulations consisted of light
and dark incubations of intact mat samples exposed to the photosystem II
inhibitor DCMU [3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea], a dissolved
organic carbon source (D-glucose), and normal seawater (37(permil)).
Photosynthetic rates were measured by both O(inf2) and (sup14)C methods,
and nitrogenase activity (NA) was estimated by the acetylene reduction
assay. Moderate reductions in salinity (from 74 to 37(permil)) had no
measurable effect on photosynthesis, O(inf2) consumption, or NA. CO(inf2)
fixation in DCMU-amended samples was (symbl)25% of that in the control
(nonamended) samples and demonstrated photosynthetic activity by anoxygenic
phototrophs. NA in DCMU-amended samples, which was consistently higher (by
a factor of 2 to 3) than the other (light and dark) treatments, was also
attributed to purple phototrophic bacteria. The ecological implication is
that N(inf2) fixation by anoxygenic phototrophs (purple phototrophic
bacteria and possibly cyanobacteria) may be regulated by the activity of
oxygenic phototrophs (cyanobacteria and diatoms). Consortial interactions
that enhance the physiological plasticity of the mat community may be a key
for optimizing production, N(inf2) fixation, and persistence in these
extreme environments.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Anoxygenic Photosynthesis and Nitrogen Fixation by a Microbial Mat Community in a Bahamian Hypersaline Lagoon
Institute of Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Morehead City, North Carolina 28557
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