首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Ecophysiological features of mat-forming bacteria Thioploca in bottom sediments of Frolikha Bay, northern Baikal]
Authors:T I Zemsiakaia  B B Namsaraev  N M Dul'tseva  T A Khanaeva  L P Golobokova  G A Dubinina  E Wada
Affiliation:Institute of Limnology, Siberian Division, Russian Academy of Sciences, ul. Lermontova 281, Irkutsk, 664033 Russia. tzema@lin.irk.ru
Abstract:A colorless sulfur bacterium of the genus Thioploca, which forms bacterial mats, was studied in the region of underwater thermal vents (Frolikha Bay, northern Baikal). The organism occurs under microaerobic conditions in top sediment layers, and its biomass can amount to 65 mg of wet weight per 1 kg of silt. Individual filaments of the bacterium penetrate the anaerobic zone to the depth of 19 cm. Thioploca is distributed in a mosaic pattern over the bottom of the bay. Thioploca mats are typically found near vents that discharge low-temperature underground water. In the form of separate filaments, this bacterium is more widely distributed in the top sediment layer, particularly in sediments with a more active sulfate reduction. The bacteria from the deep-water and coastal areas of the bay have different morphology. Cells of Thioploca are able to accumulate nitrate, and the coefficient of nitrate accumulation in wet bacterial mass in relation to the near-bottom water is 1.3 x 10(4), suggesting a similarity of metabolism with seawater species. A more lightweight isotopic composition of nitrogen in cell mass as compared to that of representatives of zoobenthos also indicates an active metabolism of nitrogen, apparently, in the process of nitrogen respiration. Comparison of the composition of stable isotopes of carbon in the biomass of representatives of different trophic levels, including Thioploca, found at a depth of 105 m indicates its planktonic origin, whereas, in the deeper bay region, the biomass of Thioploca incorporates more of the light carbon originating from biogenic methane.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号