A single Thaumarchaeon drives nitrification in deep oligotrophic Lake Constance |
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Authors: | Janina Herber Franziska Klotz Benjamin Frommeyer Severin Weis Dietmar Straile Allison Kolar Johannes Sikorski Markus Egert Michael Dannenmann Michael Pester |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, Universitätsstrasse 10, Constance, 78457 Germany;2. Faculty of Medical and Life Sciences, Institute of Precision Medicine, Furtwangen University, Jakob-Kienzle-Str. 17, Villingen-Schwenningen, 78054 Germany;3. Limnological Institute, University of Konstanz, Mainaustraße 252, Constance, 78464 Germany;4. Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research, Atmospheric Environmental Research (IMK-IFU), Kreuzeckbahnstr. 19, 82467 Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany;5. Department of Microorganisms, Leibniz Institute DSMZ – German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, Inhoffenstr. 7B, 38124 Braunschweig, Germany |
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Abstract: | Ammonia released during organic matter mineralization is converted during nitrification to nitrate. We followed spatiotemporal dynamics of the nitrifying microbial community in deep oligotrophic Lake Constance. Depth-dependent decrease of total ammonium (0.01–0.84 μM) indicated the hypolimnion as the major place of nitrification with 15N-isotope dilution measurements indicating a threefold daily turnover of hypolimnetic total ammonium. This was mirrored by a strong increase of ammonia-oxidizing Thaumarchaeota towards the hypolimnion (13%–21% of bacterioplankton) throughout spring to autumn as revealed by amplicon sequencing and quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Ammonia-oxidizing bacteria were typically two orders of magnitude less abundant and completely ammonia-oxidizing (comammox) bacteria were not detected. Both, 16S rRNA gene and amoA (encoding ammonia monooxygenase subunit B) analyses identified only one major species-level operational taxonomic unit (OTU) of Thaumarchaeota (99% of all ammonia oxidizers in the hypolimnion), which was affiliated to Nitrosopumilus spp. The relative abundance distribution of the single Thaumarchaeon strongly correlated to an equally abundant Chloroflexi clade CL500-11 OTU and a Nitrospira OTU that was one order of magnitude less abundant. The latter dominated among recognized nitrite oxidizers. This extremely low diversity of nitrifiers shows how vulnerable the ecosystem process of nitrification may be in Lake Constance as Central Europe's third largest lake. |
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