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High diversity of ammonia‐oxidizing archaea in permanent and seasonal oxygen‐deficient waters of the eastern South Pacific
Authors:Verónica Molina  Lucy Belmar  Osvaldo Ulloa
Institution:Departamento de Oceanografía and Centro de Investigación Oceanográfica en el Pacífico Sudoriental, Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160‐C, Concepción, Chile.
Abstract:The community structure of putative aerobic ammonia‐oxidizing archaea (AOA) was explored in two oxygen‐deficient ecosystems of the eastern South Pacific: the oxygen minimum zone off Peru and northern Chile (11°S–20°S), where permanent suboxic and low‐ammonium conditions are found at intermediate depths, and the continental shelf off central Chile (36°S), where seasonal oxygen‐deficient and relatively high‐ammonium conditions develop in the water column, particularly during the upwelling season. The AOA community composition based on the ammonia monooxygenase subunit A (amoA) genes changed according to the oxygen concentration in the water column and the ecosystem studied, showing a higher diversity in the seasonal low‐oxygen waters. The majority of the archaeal amoA genotypes was affiliated to the uncultured clusters A (64%) and B (35%), with Cluster A AOA being mainly associated with higher oxygen and ammonium concentrations and Cluster B AOA with permanent oxygen‐ and ammonium‐poor waters. Q‐PCR assays revealed that AOA are an abundant community (up to 105amoA copies ml?1), while bacterial amoA genes from β proteobacteria were undetected. Our results thus suggest that a diverse uncultured AOA community, for which, therefore, we do not have any physiological information, to date, is an important component of the nitrifying community in oxygen‐deficient marine ecosystems, and particularly in rich coastal upwelling ones.
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