Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 1999, p. 4393-4398, Vol. 65, No. 10
Darling Marine Center, University of Maine,
Walpole, Maine 04573
Received 20 May 1999/Accepted 5 August 1999
In vitro assays of washed, excised roots revealed maximum potential
ferric iron reduction rates of >100 µmol g (dry
weight)
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Ferric Iron Reduction by Bacteria Associated with
the Roots of Freshwater and Marine Macrophytes
1 day
1 for three freshwater
macrophytes and rates between 15 and 83 µmol (dry
weight)
1 day
1 for two marine species. The
rates varied with root morphology but not consistently (fine root
activity exceeded smooth root activity in some but not all cases).
Sodium molybdate added at final concentrations of 0.2 to 20 mM did not
inhibit iron reduction by roots of marine macrophytes (Spartina
alterniflora and Zostera marina). Roots of a
freshwater macrophyte, Sparganium eurycarpum, that were
incubated with an analog of humic acid precursors, anthroquinone disulfate (AQDS), reduced freshly precipitated iron oxyhydroxide contained in dialysis bags that excluded solutes with molecular weights
of >1,000; no reduction occurred in the absence of AQDS. Bacterial
enrichment cultures and isolates from freshwater and marine roots used
a variety of carbon and energy sources (e.g., acetate, ethanol,
succinate, toluene, and yeast extract) and ferric oxyhydroxide, ferric
citrate, uranate, and AQDS as terminal electron acceptors. The
temperature optima for a freshwater isolate and a marine isolate were
equivalent (approximately 32°C). However, iron reduction by the
freshwater isolate decreased with increasing salinity, while reduction
by the marine isolate displayed a relatively broad optimum salinity
between 20 and 35 ppt. Our results suggest that by participating in an
active iron cycle and perhaps by reducing humic acids, iron reducers in
the rhizoplane of aquatic macrophytes limit organic availability to
other heterotrophs (including methanogens) in the rhizosphere and bulk sediments.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Darling Marine
Center, University of Maine, Walpole, ME 04573. Phone: (207) 563-3146, ext. 207. Fax: (207) 563-3119. E-mail: gking{at}maine.edu.
Contribution 333 from the Darling Marine Center.
This article has been cited by other articles:
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»