Temperature control of acterial carbonmineralization processes in marine sediments

The present work analyzes the potential impact of anticipated global warming on the bacterial carbon cycling in marine shelf sediments. Current changes of the marine biological carbon cycle in response to climate warming in different regions of the world ocean are closely coupled to the response of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robador, Alberto
Other Authors: Jorgensen, Bo Barker, Brüchert, Volker
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Universität Bremen 2009
Subjects:
570
Online Access:https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/2757
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-diss000117369
Description
Summary:The present work analyzes the potential impact of anticipated global warming on the bacterial carbon cycling in marine shelf sediments. Current changes of the marine biological carbon cycle in response to climate warming in different regions of the world ocean are closely coupled to the response of bacteria to environmental temperatures. We investigated the correlation between ambient temperatures and the physiological adaptations, in terms of energy metabolism, of sulfatereducing bacteria (SRB) in polar, temperate and tropical sediments. In short-term sediment incubations in a temperature gradient block, sulfate-reduction rates (SRR) were measured using 35S-sulfate. Resulting temperature response profiles were used to examine the competitiveness of SRB, in terms of relative SRR of maximal potential rates, the temperature dependence for energy metabolism of SRB and the correlation of cardinal temperatures of sulfate reduction and sediment temperatures. We observed that SRB in polar sediments are more competitive than their counterparts in warmer habitats at similar low temperatures. Although metabolic rates in warmer latitudes exhibited higher temperature dependence below 8-18Ã °C, optimal temperature conditions for sulfate reduction in these environments are closer to their ambient temperatures resulting in a higher competitiveness at in situ conditions. Together, these observations imply that biography and, consequently, environmental temperature variability play an important role in the physiological selection and divergence of microbiota in different latitudes. Over a long-term (2 year) temperature incubation experiment, we measured 35S-SRR in a temperature gradient block and used CARDFISH of sulfate-reducing bacteria to describe the temperature control of carbon mineralization rates via sulfate reduction in Arctic marine sediments in comparison to a temperate habitat. This study is innovative in that we examine the consequences of temperature shifts by investigating the activity and the population dynamics ...