4.4 Article

Anammox bacteria and the anaerobic oxidation of ammonium in the oxygen minimum zone off northern Chile

期刊

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr2.2008.09.016

关键词

Anammox; Denitrification; Oxygen minimum zone; Eastern tropical South Pacific

资金

  1. DAAD (German Academic Exchange Services)
  2. Millennium Scientific Initiative [EBMA P04/007]
  3. Marine Genomics postdoctoral fellowship [PBCT RUE 004]
  4. Chilean National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research
  5. FONDAP program [15010007]
  6. Agouron Institute [Al-MME1.05]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Anammox is the anaerobic oxidation of ammonium by nitrite or nitrate to yield N-2. This process, along with conventional denitrification, contributes to nitrogen loss in oxygen-deficient systems. Anammox is performed by a special group of bacteria belonging to the Planctomycetes phylum. However, information about the distribution, activity, and controlling factors of these anammox bacteria is still limited. Herein, we examine the phylogenetic diversity, vertical distribution, and activity of anammox bacteria in the coastal upwelling region and oxygen minimum zone off northern Chile. The phylogeny of anammox bacteria was studied using primers designed to specifically target 16S rRNA genes from Planctomycetes in samples taken during a cruise in 2004. Anammox bacteria-like sequences affiliated with Candidatus Scalindua spp. dominated the 16S rRNA gene clone library. However, 62% of the sequences subgrouped separately within this cluster and together with a single sequence retrieved from the suboxic zone of the freshwater Lake Tanganyika. The vertical distribution and activity of anammox bacteria were explored through CARD-FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization with catalyzed reporter deposition) and N-15 labeling incubations, respectively, at two different open-ocean stations during a second cruise in 2005. Anammox bacterial CARD-FISH counts (up to 3000 cells ml(-1)) and activity (up to 5.75 nmol N-2 L-1 d(-1)) were only detected at the station subjected directly to the upwelling influence. Anammox cell abundance and activity were highest at 50 m depth, which is the upper part of the OMZ. In this layer, a high abundance of cyanobacteria and a marked nitrogen deficit were also observed. Thus, our results show the presence of a new subcluster within the marine anammox phylogeny and indicate high vertical variability in the abundance and activity of anammox bacteria that could be related to an intensification of carbon and nitrogen cycling in the upper part of the OMZ. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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