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1.
Five closed saline lakes near Humboldt, Saskatchewan, were found to be meromictic. Two of these lakes (Waldsea, Deadmoose) were first discovered to be meromictic in the early 1970s and three (Arthur, Marie, Sayer) in 1985. The origin of their meromixis is ectogenic. One of the lakes, Waldsea, had surface salinities far higher in 1960–1961 than those of 1970 or later and as high as that of the monimolimnion occasionally was from 1970 to the present. During the late 1960s to 1980 the lake level of Waldsea rose four metres as a result of higher than normal snowpacks and subsequent high snowmelt runoff. Endogenic processes of freezing out of salts from the upper metre during ice formation and precipitation of sodium sulphate during autumn cooling also promote meromixis. The lakes which are located in depressions in a relatively flat topography are very exposed to periodic high velocity westerly winds. Although Deadmoose and Waldsea lakes are relatively deep, Arthur, Marie and Sayer lakes have maximum depths of only three to five metres. Meromixis has persisted until the present in three lakes but Marie and Arthur lakes became holomictic during the autumn of 1988, a severe drought year. Bacterial plates were prominent in Waldsea, Deadmoose and Sayer lakes. BChl-a and BChl-d were present in 1988 with maxima of 2652 mg · m−3 BChl-a and 4290 mg · m−3 BChl-d in Sayer Lake. BChl-a virtually disappeared in subsequent years.  相似文献   

2.
Cricotopus ornatus was the predominant chironomid in meromictic, saline Waldsea Lake. Annual production of C. ornatus larvae in the mixolimnion was estimated to be 107 mg m-2 (dry weight) in 1974, 66.5 mg m-2 in 1975 and 69.5 mg m-2 in 1976. These estimates are similar to those for chironomids in Canadian arctic lakes and deep-water areas of the Great Lakes. Annual P/B ratios were 5.4 in 1974, 6.8 in 1975 and 6.8 in 1976. These ratios are in the middle of the range reported for chironomids. The major factors limiting chironomid production in Waldsea Lake appear to be: (1) restriction of the habitable zone because of meromixis with accompanying loss of mobile first and second instars that are swept out of the mixolimnion (2) the relatively narrow zone of good C. ornatus habitat, i.e. areas of dense macrophyte or benthic algal growth and (3) predation by nine-spine stickleback and damselfly naiads.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of light quality (color) on the 14CO2 fixation rates of natural population of photosynthetic sulfur bacteria were tested. The phototrophic bacteria were collected from the sulfide containing waters of 3 stratified lakes. The populations sampled survive in environments where light intensities are very low. Not only are the light intensities low but, due to the light filtering characteristics of the lake water, the light is of specific color. It was determined that the spectral properties of the three lakes differed, hence the quality of light reaching the phototrophic bacteria in each lake differed. It was also observed that only green sulfur bacteria were present in the study lake which transmits mainly red light and both purple and green sulfur bacteria were present in the two study lakes which transmit predominantly green light. Enrichment cultures were set up with phototrophic bacteria from two of the lakes serving as the inocula. Enrichment culture studies and photosynthetic responses of the natural populations indicate that light quality is a major factor in determining the composition of phototrophic bacterial population in some lakes.Non-Common Abbreviations Bchl Bacteriochlorophyll - DPM Disintegrations per minute  相似文献   

4.
1. The occurrence and grazing activity of mixotrophic (phagotrophic) algae in three icecovered freshwater lakes of different trophic status were examined (oligotrophic Lake Giles, mesotrophic Lake Lacawac, eutrophic Lake Waynewood), Microbial population densities were low (4.1–7.2 × 105 bacteria ml?1 and 1.2–2.4 × 103 nanoplanktonic protists ml?1). All three nanoplankton communities were dominated by chloroplast-bearing forms (60–96%). 2. Mixotrophs formed up to 48% of the phototrophic nanoplankton in Lake Lacawac and were responsible for up to ~90% of the observed uptake of bacteria-sized particles. The abundance of mixotrophic algae in Lakes Giles and Waynewood were extremely low (3 and 2% of the phototrophic algae, respectively), and heterotrophs dominated nanoplankton bacterivory. 3. The overall impact of nanoplankton feeding activity on the bacterial assemblage was low under the ice in Lakes Giles and Waynewood. Removal rates of bacteria based on our particle uptake experiments were 1.0 and 4.0% of the bacterial standing stock day?1 in these lakes, respectively. Removal rates were higher in Lake Lacawac and ranged from 4.9 to 11% of the bacterial standing stock day?1 on 2 successive sampling days.  相似文献   

5.
The spatial distribution and composition of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria in the enriched bacterial communities from different depths of karst lakes Kirkilai and Ramunelis was studied using spectrophotometric analysis, as well as microbiological and molecular methods. In Lake Kirkilai, the highest bacterial abundance was measured in the metalimnion and near the bottom (up to 10.7 × 106 cell/mL); in Lake Ramunelis it was in the anoxic hypolimnion (up to 22.4 × 106 cell/mL). Increased water mineralization (0.5–1.2 g/L) with the domination of SO 4 2? and Ca2+ ions created favorable conditions for the development of sulfate-reducing bacteria; hydrogen sulfide produced as a result of their life activity facilitated the development of sulfur-oxidizing bacteria. The pigment analysis of phototrophic green and purple sulfur bacteria showed the domination of green sulfur bacteria in the enrichment culture. The results of phylogenetic analysis showed that Chlorobium limicola dominated in the enrichment culture for the green sulfur bacteria, whereas purple nonsulfur bacteria of the genus Rhodopseudomonas dominated in the enrichment culture for the purple sulfur bacteria.  相似文献   

6.
The salt lakes of western Canada: A paleolimnological overview   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The northern Great Plains of western Canada contain many saline and hypersaline lakes. Deadmoose and Waldsea Lakes in south-central Saskatchewan are meromictic, with saline Mg-Na-SO4-Cl waters overlying denser brines of similar composition. Mineralogical, chemical, palynological, and stable isotope analyses of the sediments in the Waldsea basin indicate the lake was much shallower about 4 000 years ago in response to a warmer and drier climate. Since that time water levels have generally increased in the basin giving rise to higher organic productivity and greater inorganic carbonate precipitation. Within this overall trend there is also evidence of several lower water stages during the last 3 000 years. The stratigraphy preserved in the Deadmoose basin suggests considerably lower water levels about 1 000 years ago.Ceylon Lake, located about 350 km south of the Waldsea-Deadmoose area, is presently a shallow, saline playa. The basin originated about 15 000 years ago as a glacial meltwater spillway. Stratigraphic variation in evaporite and carbonate mineralogy shows that the basin evolved from a relatively low salinity, riverine lake to one in which initially Na-rich and then Mg-rich hypersaline brines dominated.Lake Manitoba is a large, hyposaline lake located in the eastern Great Plains about 700 km from the Deadmoose-Waldsea area. Stable oxygen and carbon isotope analyses of the endogenic carbonates in the basin indicate gradually increasing levels of organic productivity but decreasing temperatures between 9 000 and 5 000 years B.P. Between about 4 000 and 2 000 years ago the isotope ratios suggest relatively stable temperatures followed by a strong decrease during the most recent 2 000 year period.  相似文献   

7.
We have studied the activity and composition of several geochemically significant physiological groups of bacteria in more than twenty alkaline salt lakes of the north-east Mongolia steppe with water salinity from 3 to 390 g l?1 and pH values ranging from 9.0 to 10.6. Active and diverse microbial communities have been found in most of the lakes. The methanotrophic bacteria were represented by the Type I members. Among the culturable forms of sulfur-oxidizing bacteria obligately chemolithoautotrophic and haloalkaliphilic representatives of the genera Thioalkalimicrobium and Thioalkalivibrio were detected in the sediments at high numbers (up to 106 cells ml?1). The largest population of anaerobic phototrophic bacteria was represented by purple sulfur bacteria of the Ectothiorhodospiraceae family. Salinity was the key factor in determining the activity and the composition of the microbial communities. The most diverse and active prokaryotic populations, including aerobic and anaerobic phototrophic, methanogenic, methanotrophic, sulfur-oxidizing, sulfate-reducing and nitrifying bacteria, were found in lakes with salinity less than 60 g l?1. In hypersaline lakes with a salinity >100 g l?1, the sulfur cycle remained active due to the activity of extremely halotolerant and alkaliphilic sulfur bacteria, while other important functional groups responsible for nitrification and methane oxidation processes were not detected. Overall, the prokaryotic communities of the Mongolian alkaline salt lakes represent an interesting new example of a diverse community of haloalkaliphilic bacteria well adopted to a broad salinity range.  相似文献   

8.
On the Kiritimati atoll, several lakes exhibit microbial mat-formation under different hydrochemical conditions. Some of these lakes trigger microbialite formation such as Lake 21, which is an evaporitic, hypersaline lake (salinity of approximately 170‰). Lake 21 is completely covered with a thick multilayered microbial mat. This mat is associated with the formation of decimeter-thick highly porous microbialites, which are composed of aragonite and gypsum crystals. We assessed the bacterial and archaeal community composition and its alteration along the vertical stratification by large-scale analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences of the nine different mat layers. The surface layers are dominated by aerobic, phototrophic, and halotolerant microbes. The bacterial community of these layers harbored Cyanobacteria (Halothece cluster), which were accompanied with known phototrophic members of the Bacteroidetes and Alphaproteobacteria. In deeper anaerobic layers more diverse communities than in the upper layers were present. The deeper layers were dominated by Spirochaetes, sulfate-reducing bacteria (Deltaproteobacteria), Chloroflexi (Anaerolineae and Caldilineae), purple non-sulfur bacteria (Alphaproteobacteria), purple sulfur bacteria (Chromatiales), anaerobic Bacteroidetes (Marinilabiacae), Nitrospirae (OPB95), Planctomycetes and several candidate divisions. The archaeal community, including numerous uncultured taxonomic lineages, generally changed from Euryarchaeota (mainly Halobacteria and Thermoplasmata) to uncultured members of the Thaumarchaeota (mainly Marine Benthic Group B) with increasing depth.  相似文献   

9.
The microbial assemblages of Lake Cisó and Lake Vilar (Banyoles, northeast Spain) were analyzed in space and time by microscopy and by performing PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and sequence analysis of 16S rRNA gene fragments. Samples obtained from different water depths and at two different times of the year (in the winter during holomixis and in the early spring during a phytoplankton bloom) were analyzed. Although the lakes have the same climatic conditions and the same water source, the limnological parameters were different, as were most of the morphologically distinguishable photosynthetic bacteria enumerated by microscopy. The phylogenetic affiliations of the predominant DGGE bands were inferred by performing a comparative 16S rRNA sequence analysis. Sequences obtained from Lake Cisó samples were related to gram-positive bacteria and to members of the division Proteobacteria. Sequences obtained from Lake Vilar samples were related to members of the Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroides phylum and to cyanobacteria. Thus, we found that like the previously reported differences between morphologically distinct inhabitants of the two lakes, there were also differences among the community members whose morphologies did not differ conspicuously. The changes in the species composition from winter to spring were also marked. The two lakes both contained sequences belonging to phototrophic green sulfur bacteria, which is consistent with microscopic observations, but these sequences were different from the sequences of cultured strains previously isolated from the lakes. Euryarchaeal sequences (i.e., methanogen- and thermoplasma-related sequences) also were present in both lakes. These euryarchaeal group sequences dominated the archaeal sequences in Lake Cisó but not in Lake Vilar. In Lake Vilar, a new planktonic population related to the crenarchaeota produced the dominant archaeal band. The phylogenetic analysis indicated that new bacterial and archaeal lineages were present and that the microbial diversity of these assemblages was greater than previously known. We evaluated the correspondence between the abundances of several morphotypes and DGGE bands by comparing microscopy and sequencing results. Our data provide evidence that the sequences obtained from the DGGE fingerprints correspond to the microorganisms that are actually present at higher concentrations in the natural system.  相似文献   

10.
Aquatic macrophytes in saline lakes of the Canadian prairies   总被引:7,自引:4,他引:3  
Vascular macrophyte species richness decreases with increasing salinity. Only three species of submerged plants (Potamogeton pectinatus, Ruppia maritima, R. occidentalis) tolerate hypersaline waters (>50 g l-1, total of ionic constituents). Eight emergent species occur in more saline habitats but only five (Scirpus maritimus var. paludosus, Distichlisstricta, Puccinellia nuttalliana, Scirpus americanus, Triglochin maritima) occur commonly over a range of saline lakes into the hypersaline category. Usually, species tolerant of high salinities are found over the entire saline spectrum and even extend into subsaline waters (<3 g l-1) and thrive there. A major increase in the number of species occurs below 5 g l-1. As the water recedes plants such as Salicornia rubra, Suaeda calceoliformes, Hordeum jubatum and Sonchus arvensis invade.Submerged angiosperm distribution is controlled by total ion concentration and substrate texture plays no apparent role. Although angiosperms normally grow in all kinds of substrates, they occupy coarse substrates in Wakaw lake because suitable fine substrates are densely colonized by charophytes. In this lake light limited growth occurs to a depth of 5% of surface light. Light was not limiting in Redberry Lake but angiosperm growth was limited to the upper 8 m (10% or more of surface light). Thermal stratification and depth (pressure) were probably limiting istead. In meromictic Waldsea Lake the depth of the chemocline (6 m, 5% surface light) delimits angiosperm growth.  相似文献   

11.
The year-to-year variations of vertical distribution and biomass of anoxic phototrophic bacteria were studied during ice periods 2003–2005 and 2007–2008 in meromictic lakes Shira and Shunet (Southern Siberia, Russian Federation). The bacterial layers in chemocline of both lakes were sampled with a thin-layer hydraulic multi-syringe sampler. In winter, biomass of purple sulphur bacteria varied considerably depending on the amount of light penetrating into the chemocline through the ice and snow cover. In relatively weakly stratified, brackish Shira Lake, the depth of chemocline varied between winters, so that light intensity for purple sulphur bacteria inhabiting this zone differed. In Shira Lake, increased transparency of mixolimnion in winter, high chemocline position and absence of snow resulted in light intensity and biomass of purple sulphur bacteria exceeding the summer values in the chemocline of the lake. We could monitor snow cover at the lake surface using remote sensing and therefore estimate dynamics and amount of light under ice and its availability for phototrophic organisms. In Shunet Lake, the light intensities in the chemocline and biomasses of purple sulphur bacteria were always lower in winter than in summer, but the biomasses of green sulphur bacteria were similar.  相似文献   

12.

Background

Over the last 30 years, extensive studies have revealed the crucial roles played by microbes in aquatic ecosystems. It has been shown that bacteria, viruses and protozoan grazers are dominant in terms of abundance and biomass. The frequent interactions between these microbiological compartments are responsible for strong trophic links from dissolved organic matter to higher trophic levels, via heterotrophic bacteria, which form the basis for the important biogeochemical roles of microbial food webs in aquatic ecosystems. To gain a better understanding of the interactions between bacteria, viruses and flagellates in lacustrine ecosystems, we investigated the effect of protistan bacterivory on bacterial abundance, production and structure [determined by 16S rRNA PCR-DGGE], and viral abundance and activity of two lakes of contrasting trophic status. Four experiments were conducted in the oligotrophic Lake Annecy and the mesotrophic Lake Bourget over two seasons (early spring vs. summer) using a fractionation approach. In situ dark vs. light incubations were performed to consider the effects of the different treatments in the presence and absence of phototrophic activity.

Results

The presence of grazers (i.e. < 5-μm small eukaryotes) affected viral production positively in all experiments, and the stimulation of viral production (compared to the treatment with no eukaryotic predators) was more variable between lakes than between seasons, with the highest value having been recorded in the mesotrophic lake (+30%). Viral lysis and grazing activities acted additively to sustain high bacterial production in all experiments. Nevertheless, the stimulation of bacterial production was more variable between seasons than between lakes, with the highest values obtained in summer (+33.5% and +37.5% in Lakes Bourget and Annecy, respectively). The presence of both predators (nanoflagellates and viruses) did not seem to have a clear influence upon bacterial community structure according to the four experiments.

Conclusions

Our results highlight the importance of a synergistic effect, i.e. the positive influence of grazers on viral activities in sustaining (directly and indirectly) bacterial production and affecting composition, in both oligotrophic and mesotrophic lakes.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of viruses on the microbial loop, with particular emphasis on bacteria, was investigated over an annual cycle in 2003–2004 in Lake Druzhby and Crooked Lake, two large ultraoligotrophic freshwater lakes in the Vestfold Hills, Eastern Antarctica. Viral abundance ranged from 0.16 to 1.56 × 109 particles L-1;1 and bacterial abundances ranged from 0.10 to 0.24 × 109 cells L-1;1, with the lowest bacterial abundances noted in the winter months. Virus-to-bacteria ratios (VBR) were consistently low in both lakes throughout the season, ranging from 1.2 to 8.4. lysogenic bacteria, determined by induction with mitomycin C, were detected on three sampling occasions out of 10 in both lakes. In Lake Druzhby and Crooked Lake, lysogenic bacteria made up between 18% and 73% of the total bacteria population during the lysogenic events. Bacterial production ranged from 8.2 to 304.9 × 106 cells L-1;1 day-1;1 and lytic viral production ranged from 47.5 to 718.4 × 106 viruslike particles L-1;1 day-1;1. When only considering primary production, heterotrophic nanoflagellate (HNF) grazing and viral lysis as the major contributors to the DOC pool (i.e., autochthonous sources), we estimated a high contribution from viruses during the winter months when >60% of the carbon supplied to the DOC pool originated from viral lysis. In contrast, during the summer <20% originated from viral lysis. Our study shows that viral process in ultraoligotrophic Antarctic lakes may be of quantitative significance with respect to carbon flow especially during the dark winter period.  相似文献   

14.
Culture-dependent and -independent techniques were used to study the diversity of chemolithoautotrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria in Soap Lake (Washington State), a meromictic, haloalkaline lake containing an unprecedentedly high sulfide concentration in the anoxic monimolimnion. Both approaches revealed the dominance of bacteria belonging to the genus Thioalkalimicrobium, which are common inhabitants of soda lakes. A dense population of Thioalkalimicrobium (up to 107 cells/ml) was found at the chemocline, which is characterized by a steep oxygen-sulfide gradient. Twelve Thioalkalimicrobium strains exhibiting three different phenotypes were isolated in pure culture from various locations in Soap Lake. The isolates fell into two groups according to 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. One of the groups was closely related to T. cyclicum, which was isolated from Mono Lake (California), a transiently meromictic, haloalkaline lake. The second group, consisting of four isolates, was phylogenetically and phenotypically distinct from known Thioalkalimicrobium species and unique to Soap Lake. It represented a new species, for which we suggest the name Thioalkalimicrobium microaerophilum sp. nov.  相似文献   

15.
Lake Bonney is one of numerous permanently ice-covered lakes located in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. The perennial ice cover maintains a chemically stratified water column and unlike other inland bodies of water, largely prevents external input of carbon and nutrients from streams. Biota are exposed to numerous environmental stresses, including year-round severe nutrient deficiency, low temperatures, extreme shade, hypersalinity, and 24-hour darkness during the winter 1. These extreme environmental conditions limit the biota in Lake Bonney almost exclusively to microorganisms 2.Single-celled microbial eukaryotes (called "protists") are important players in global biogeochemical cycling 3 and play important ecological roles in the cycling of carbon in the dry valley lakes, occupying both primary and tertiary roles in the aquatic food web. In the dry valley aquatic food web, protists that fix inorganic carbon (autotrophy) are the major producers of organic carbon for organotrophic organisms 4, 2. Phagotrophic or heterotrophic protists capable of ingesting bacteria and smaller protists act as the top predators in the food web 5. Last, an unknown proportion of the protist population is capable of combined mixotrophic metabolism 6, 7. Mixotrophy in protists involves the ability to combine photosynthetic capability with phagotrophic ingestion of prey microorganisms. This form of mixotrophy differs from mixotrophic metabolism in bacterial species, which generally involves uptake dissolved carbon molecules. There are currently very few protist isolates from permanently ice-capped polar lakes, and studies of protist diversity and ecology in this extreme environment have been limited 8, 4, 9, 10, 5. A better understanding of protist metabolic versatility in the simple dry valley lake food web will aid in the development of models for the role of protists in the global carbon cycle.We employed an enrichment culture approach to isolate potentially phototrophic and mixotrophic protists from Lake Bonney. Sampling depths in the water column were chosen based on the location of primary production maxima and protist phylogenetic diversity 4, 11, as well as variability in major abiotic factors affecting protist trophic modes: shallow sampling depths are limited for major nutrients, while deeper sampling depths are limited by light availability. In addition, lake water samples were supplemented with multiple types of growth media to promote the growth of a variety of phototrophic organisms.RubisCO catalyzes the rate limiting step in the Calvin Benson Bassham (CBB) cycle, the major pathway by which autotrophic organisms fix inorganic carbon and provide organic carbon for higher trophic levels in aquatic and terrestrial food webs 12. In this study, we applied a radioisotope assay modified for filtered samples 13 to monitor maximum carboxylase activity as a proxy for carbon fixation potential and metabolic versatility in the Lake Bonney enrichment cultures.  相似文献   

16.
Seasonal microbial activity in Antarctic freshwater lake sediments   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:2  
Summary Seasonal fluctuations in population numbers and activity were monitored in bottom sediments of oligotrophic Moss Lake, mesotrophic Heywood Lake and eutrophic Amos Lake on Signy Island, South Orkney Islands, during 1976–78. Heywood and Amos Lakes became anoxic under winter ice cover (8–10 months) and significant populations of facultatively anaerobic heterotrophs and sulphate-reducing bacteria developed. In contrast, Moss Lake surface sediments never became anoxic and anaerobic bacteria were virtually absent. Direct microscopic counts and viable plate counts fluctuated relatively little in Moss Lake throughout the study period, whereas distinct seasonality was observed in the more enriched lake systems. Similarly, measurements of oxygen consumption and dark 14CO2 uptake by mud cores indicated no obvious seasonal fluctuations in Moss Lake data, in contrast to the marked seasonal pattern observed in data from the other lakes. In these latter systems, oxygen uptake rates were highest in summer (c. 400 mg O2 m-2 d-1) and virtually undetectable in winter. Comparison of oxygen uptake with oxygen concentration and temperature revealed differences, between lakes, in uptake response to oxygen concentration, whereas uptake response to temperature did not differ significantly between lakes. Chemosynthetic production in the Signy Island lake sediments was in the range 1.6–35.3 g C m-2 (mud surface) d-1 with highest values recorded in Amos Lake under winter ice cover and anoxic conditions. The findings from this and earlier studies of the three lakes have been assembled to indicate the relative importance of green plants and bacteria to the carbon cycle in these permanently cold systems.  相似文献   

17.
Species composition of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria in microbial mats of the Goryachinsk thermal spring was investigated along the temperature gradient. The spring belonging to nitrogenous alkaline hydrotherms is located at the shore of Lake Baikal 188 km north-east from Ulan-Ude. The water is of the sulfate-sodium type, contains trace amounts of sulfide, and salinity does not exceed 0.64 g/L, pH 9.5. The temperature at the outlet of the spring may reach 54°C. The cultures of filamentous anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria, nonsulfur and sulfur purple bacteria, and aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria were identified using the pufLM molecular marker. The fmoA marker was used for identification of green sulfur bacteria. Filamentous cyanobacteria predominated in the mats, with anoxygenic phototrophs comprising a minor component of the phototrophic communities. Thermophilic bacteria Chloroflexus aurantiacus were detected in the samples from both the thermophilic and mesophilic mats. Cultures of nonsulfur purple bacteria similar to Blastochloris sulfoviridis and Rhodomicrobium vannielii were isolated from the mats developed at high (50.6–49.4°C) and low temperatures (45–20°C). Purple sulfur bacteria Allochromatium sp. and Thiocapsa sp., as well as green sulfur bacteria Chlorobium sp., were revealed in low-temperature mats. Truly thermophilic purple and green sulfur bacteria were not found in the spring. Anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria found in the spring were typical of the sulfur communities, for which the sulfur cycle is mandatory. The presence of aerobic bacteriochlorophyll a-containing bacteria identified as Agrobacterium (Rhizobium) tumifaciens in the mesophilic (20°C) mat is of interest.  相似文献   

18.
The rates of cellulose breakdown, composition of detrital microflora, and density of bacterial populations were determined in the epilimnetic sediments and water columns of two poorly buffered, oligotrophic, Canadian Shield lakes having mean surficial pHs of 4.6 (Bat Lake) and 6.6 (Harp Lake). The decomposition rate was significantly lower in oxic sediment of the acidified lake than of the circumneutral lake, but water column rates were almost identical in the two lakes. These results are explained in terms of the groups of cellulolytic microorganisms which were observed by phase-contrast microscopy as being active at the different sites: fungi in Bat Lake water and Cytophaga-like bacteria in the water and sediment of Harp Lake. Cytophaga-like bacteria were also the main decomposers in Bat Lake sediment, but their activity was restricted at porewater pHs of <5.0. Acridine orange direct counts of bacteria in the top centimeter of sediment ranged from 3.7 × 108 to 1.0 × 109 per g, and counts in planktonic water samples ranged from 4.9 × 105 to 1.2 × 106 per ml. Bacterial densities at most sites decreased significantly (P < 0.001) from August to late October, but did not show a consistent pattern of differences related to pH.  相似文献   

19.
The saline soda lakes of the Kulunda steppe (Altai krai) are small and shallow; they are characterized by a wide range of salinity and alkalinity, as well as by the extreme instability of their water and chemical regimes. Accumulations of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria (APB) visible to the unaided eye were noted only in several lakes with high rates of sulfate reduction in their bottom sediments. However, enumeration of APB cells by inoculation revealed their presence in all 17 lakes. APB cell numbers varied from 103 to 109 CFU cm?3. In the APB communities of all lakes, purple sulfur bacteria of the family Ectothiorhodospi- raceae were predominant. In 14 out of the 17 lakes, purple nonsulfur bacteria of the family Rhodobacteraceae were also detected (103–107 CFU cm?3). Purple sulfur bacteria of the family Chromatiaceae were less abundant: Halochromatium sp. (104–107 CFU cm?3) were found in six lakes, while Thiocapsa sp. (104 CFU cm3) were detected in one lake. On the whole, the APB communities of the soda lakes of the Kulunda steppe were characterized by the low diversity and evenness of their species compositions, as well as by the pronounced dominance of the members of the family Ectothiorhodospiraceae. There was no correlation between the structures of the APB communities and alkalinity. However, the dependence of the species composition of APB (mainly ectothiorhodospiras) on water mineralization was revealed. High mineralization (above 200 g l?1) was a limiting factor that affected the APB communities on the whole, restricting the APB species diversity to extremely halophilic bacteria of the genus Halorhodospira.  相似文献   

20.
A filamentous, gliding, thermophilic bacterium, found growing abundantly as a surface mat in a limited number of alkaline hot springs in Oregon, is described and designated F-1. The bacteria were studied in the field and in coculture with an aerobic chemoheterotroph. The bacteria are phototrophic and contain bacteriochlorophyll a and several carotenoid pigments. Unlike the other gliding phototrophic bacteria, members of the family Chloroflexaceae, F-1 does not contain chlorosomes or bacteriochlorophyll c or d. The light-dependent uptake of simple organic compounds (acetate and glucose) was demonstrated in field populations. Near-infrared radiation sustained this uptake, which occurred equally well under aerobic or anaerobic conditions and was insensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The bacteria formed conspicuous dominant mats from about 35 to 56°C, and they covered mats of cyanobacteria in the spring, summer, and autumn months. It appears that they depend on high light intensities to maintain a dense population.  相似文献   

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