Bacterial [methyl-3H]thymidine incorporation in substrate-amended estuarine sediment slurries |
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Authors: | Peter Wellsbury Rod A. Herbert R.John Parkes |
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Affiliation: | Department of Geology, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1JP, UK;Department of Biological Sciences, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 4HN, UK |
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Abstract: | Abstract Five different bacterial communities were enriched in substrate-amended slurries of sediment from the Tay Estuary, Scotland. During incubation of the slurries, concentrations of volatile fatty acids, sulphate, sulphide and methane were monitored to clearly define the activity of the stimulated populations. An aerobic population, a ‘microaerophilic’ population and three anaerobic populations (fermentative heterotrophs, sulphate-reducing bacteria and methanogens plus acetogens) were established to reflect community growth and metabolism both in surface oxic and deeper anoxic layers. Similar numbers of cells involved in division were observed in all five slurries, demonstrating the potential for bacterial production. Thymidine incorporation rates in glucose-stimulated slurries under both aerobic and fully anaerobic conditions were similar, confirming the ability of fermentative anaerobic heterotrophs to incorporate [ methyl -3H]thymidine into DNA during growth. Although anaerobic communities of sulphate-reducing, acetogenic plus methanogenic bacteria were stimulated and actively growing, they did not incorporate [ methyl -3H]thymidine into DNA. Since the thymidine technique does not measure the growth of these important groups, calculated productivity values based upon thymidine incorporation within anoxic sediment systems will be substantially underestimated, even if growth substrates are not limiting. |
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Keywords: | [methyl-3H]Thymidine incorporation Anaerobic bacteria Sulphate-reducing bacteria Fermentative heterotroph Methanogen Stimulated slurry |
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