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Bacterial activity and diffusive nutrient supply in the oligotrophic Central Atlantic Ocean

Authors :
Josep M. Gasol
Carlos M. Duarte
Evaristo Vázquez-Domínguez
Dolors Vaqué
Susana Agustí
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Inter-Research Science Center, 2009.

Abstract

12 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables<br />Growing evidence of inorganic nutrient limitation on oceanic bacteria suggests a global dependence of bacterial activity and production on rates of nutrient supply. The present study examined whether surface bacterial abundance is significantly related to water column stability, and whether bacterial activity and growth rate are related to the rate of diffusive supply of inorganic nutrients to the mixed layer in the Central Atlantic during 2 meridional cruises. The 2 cruises were run under very different oceanic conditions, with relatively low values of bacterial activity in spring 1995 and relatively higher values in fall 1995. We obtained depth-resolved data in the second cruise and found that the integrated value of bacterial production was also related to the rate of nutrient supply, while integrated particulate primary production and chlorophyll concentration were not. There was also no relationship between particulate primary production and bacterial production. The relationship between nutrient supply and integrated bacterial production was tested with data from a mesocosm experiment showing a good fit to the pattern obtained in the Atlantic. Average bacterial production was ~21% of primary production in the Central Atlantic, with values ranging between 5 and 100%, and higher values in the tropical areas. The demonstration of a direct relationship between nutrient supply and bacterial activity helps to explain a relatively large bacterial biomass as compared to phytoplankton biomass, a low bacterial growth efficiency, and a high bacterial carbon demand relative to contemporaneous primary production often measured in the open ocean, as well as the accumulation of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) observed in nutrient-limited oligotrophic seas<br />This research was part of the LATITUD project (AMB94-0739), funded by the Spanish Interministerial Commission for Science and Technology, while writing was supported by projects COCA (REN2000-1471-CO2-01/MAR) and MODIVUS (CTM2005-04795/MAR). We thank the crew of RV ‘Hespérides’ for assistance

Details

ISSN :
16161564 and 09483055
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Aquatic Microbial Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8d787a5d56aaf351935f9bbf658ebe4