Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2000, p. 2888-2897, Vol. 66, No. 7
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
and
Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology,
Bremen, Germany,1 and Danish Center for
Earth System Science, Institute of Biology, SDU
Odense University,
Odense, Denmark2
Received 29 February 2000/Accepted 5 May 2000
The microbial ecology of anaerobic carbon oxidation processes was
investigated in Black Sea shelf sediments from mid-shelf with
well-oxygenated bottom water to the oxic-anoxic chemocline at the
shelf-break. At all stations, organic carbon (Corg)
oxidation rates were rapidly attenuated with depth in anoxically
incubated sediment. Dissimilatory Mn reduction was the most important
terminal electron-accepting process in the active surface layer to a
depth of ~1 cm, while SO42
reduction
accounted for the entire Corg oxidation below. Manganese reduction was supported by moderately high Mn oxide concentrations. A
contribution from microbial Fe reduction could not be discerned, and
the process was not stimulated by addition of ferrihydrite. Manganese
reduction resulted in carbonate precipitation, which complicated the
quantification of Corg oxidation rates. The relative contribution of Mn reduction to Corg oxidation in the
anaerobic incubations was 25 to 73% at the stations with oxic bottom
water. In situ, where Mn reduction must compete with oxygen
respiration, the contribution of the process will vary in response to
fluctuations in bottom water oxygen concentrations. Total bacterial
numbers as well as the detection frequency of bacteria with fluorescent in situ hybridization scaled to the mineralization rates.
Most-probable-number enumerations yielded up to 105 cells
of acetate-oxidizing Mn-reducing bacteria (MnRB) cm
3,
while counts of Fe reducers were <102 cm
3.
At two stations, organisms affiliated with Arcobacter were
the only types identified from 16S rRNA clone libraries from the
highest positive MPN dilutions for MnRB. At the third station, a clone type affiliated with Pelobacter was also observed. Our
results delineate a niche for dissimilatory Mn-reducing bacteria in
sediments with Mn oxide concentrations greater than ~10 µmol
cm
3 and indicate that bacteria that are specialized in Mn
reduction, rather than known Mn and Fe reducers, are important in this niche.
Present address: Laboratori de Microbiologia, Facultat de Ciencies,
Universitat de les Illes Balears, Palma de Mallorca, Spain.
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