4.8 Article

N2-fixation, ammonium release and N-transfer to the microbial and classical food web within a plankton community

Journal

ISME JOURNAL
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages 450-459

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2015.126

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Agency of Denmark
  2. Agency of Iceland
  3. Agency of Norway
  4. Agency of Sweden
  5. Geological Survey of Finland
  6. Swedish Museum of Natural History
  7. Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning, FORMAS [215-2009-813, 215-2010-779]
  8. Max Planck Society
  9. Baltic Ecosystem Adaptive Management programme
  10. University of Stockholm
  11. University of Gothenburg
  12. Swedish Research Council (VR) [621-2011-4406]

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We investigated the role of N-2-fixation by the colony-forming cyanobacterium, Aphanizomenon spp., for the plankton community and N-budget of the N-limited Baltic Sea during summer by using stable isotope tracers combined with novel secondary ion mass spectrometry, conventional mass spectrometry and nutrient analysis. When incubated with N-15(2), Aphanizomenon spp. showed a strong N-15-enrichment implying substantial N-15(2)-fixation. Intriguingly, Aphanizomenon did not assimilate tracers of (NH4+)-N-15 from the surrounding water. These findings are in line with model calculations that confirmed a negligible N-source by diffusion-limited NH4+ fluxes to Aphanizomenon colonies at low bulk concentrations (<250 nM) as compared with N-2-fixation within colonies. No N-2-fixation was detected in autotrophic microorganisms <5 mu m, which relied on NH4+ uptake from the surrounding water. Aphanizomenon released about 50% of its newly fixed N-2 as NH4+. However, NH4+ did not accumulate in the water but was transferred to heterotrophic and autotrophic microorganisms as well as to diatoms (Chaetoceros sp.) and copepods with a turnover time of similar to 5 h. We provide direct quantitative evidence that colony-forming Aphanizomenon releases about half of its recently fixed N-2 as NH4+, which is transferred to the prokaryotic and eukaryotic plankton forming the basis of the food web in the plankton community. Transfer of newly fixed nitrogen to diatoms and copepods furthermore implies a fast export to shallow sediments via fast-sinking fecal pellets and aggregates. Hence, N-2-fixing colony-forming cyanobacteria can have profound impact on ecosystem productivity and biogeochemical processes at shorter time scales (hours to days) than previously thought.

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