4.7 Article

Importance of Bacterial Maintenance Respiration in a Subarctic Estuary: a Proof of Concept from the Field

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 77, Issue 3, Pages 574-586

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-018-1244-7

Keywords

Marine; Bacteria; Maintenance; Respiration; Stoichiometry; Model

Funding

  1. Strategic Marine Environmental Research Programme of Ecosystem Dynamics in the Baltic Sea in a changing climate perspective (EcoChange)
  2. Umea University

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Bacterial respiration contributes to atmospheric carbon dioxide accumulation and development of hypoxia and is a critical, often overlooked, component of ecosystem function. This study investigates the concept that maintenance respiration is a significant proportion of bacterial respiration at natural nutrient levels in the field, advancing our understanding of bacterial living conditions and energy strategies. Two river-sea transects of respiration and specific growth rates were analyzed representing low- and high-productivity conditions (by in situ bacterial biomass production) in a subarctic estuary, using an established ecophysiological linear model (the Pirt model) estimating maintenance respiration. The Pirt model was applicable to field conditions during high, but not low, bacterial biomass production. However, a quadratic model provided a better fit to observed data, accounting for the maintained respiration at low mu. A first estimate of maintenance respiration was 0.58 fmol O-2 day(-1) cell(-1) by the quadratic model. Twenty percent to nearly all of the bacterial respiration was due to maintenance respiration over the observed range of mu (0.21-0.002 day(-1)). In the less productive condition, bacterial specific respiration was high and without dependence on , suggesting enhanced bacterial energy expenditure during starvation. Annual maintenance respiration accounted for mu 58% of the total bacterioplankton respiration based on mu from monitoring data. Phosphorus availability occasionally, but inconsistently, explained some of the remaining variation in bacterial specific respiration. Bacterial maintenance respiration can constitute a large share of pelagic respiration and merit further study to understand bacterial energetics and oxygen dynamics in the aquatic environment.

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