4.5 Article

Distribution, ecology and molecular identification of Thioploca from Danish brackish water sediments

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY
Volume 73, Issue 1, Pages 110-120

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-6941.2010.00878.x

Keywords

biomass distribution; ecological niche; nitrate accumulation; Thioploca ingrica; phylogeny

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The distribution of Thioploca populations was investigated in Danish fjords, brackish lakes and coastal waters. Thioploca was found in three geographically distinct populations, where biomasses reached 33.8 +/- 14.3 g wet weight m-2 (mean +/- SD). Mats or lawns were not formed at the sediment surfaces and Thioploca biomasses peaked 4-7 cm into the sediment and extended down to 18 cm depth. Morphology and 16S rRNA gene sequences classified all populations as Thioploca ingrica. A sequence divergence of 1.7-2.2% indicated that T. ingrica comprise at least two genotypes. Physiological analysis showed that T. ingrica accumulate nitrate in concentrations of approximately 3 mM and that bicarbonate and acetate are used as a carbon source. The presence of oxygen promoted carbon incorporation, but T. ingrica could survive up to 3 months without an external supply of nitrate or oxygen. Thioploca ingrica populations were exclusively found close to river outlets in a bioturbated sediment with separate sulphidic spots and worm burrow walls containing nitrate and oxygen. It is hypothesized that the subsurface T. ingrica have a special advantage in this heterogeneous environment using their sheath surrounding the bacterial trichomes when navigating between electron donor and acceptor.

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