Observations of Barophilic Microbial Activity in Samples of Sediment and Intercepted Particulates from the Demerara Abyssal Plain

Author:

Deming Jody W.1,Colwell Rita R.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742

Abstract

To better understand the ecological significance of pressure effects on bacteria in the abyssobenthic boundary layer, experimental suspensions of sediments and sinking particulates were prepared from samples collected in boxcore and bottom-moored sediment traps at two stations (depth, 4,470 and 4,850m) in the Demerara abyssal plain off the coast of Brazil. Replicate samples were incubated shipboard at 3�C and at both atmospheric and deep-sea pressures (440 or 480 atm [4.46 � 10 4 or 4.86 � 10 4 kPa]) following the addition of [ 14 C]glutamic acid (<10 μg liter −1 ) or yeast extract (0.025%) and the antibiotic nalidixic acid (0.002%). In seven of the eight samples supplemented with isotope, a barophilic microbial response was detected, i.e., substrate incorporation and respiration were greater under in situ pressure than at 1 atm (101.3 kPa). In the remaining sample, prepared from a sediment trap warmed to 24�C before recovery, pressure was observed to inhibit substrate utilization. Total bacterial counts by epifluorescence microscopy decreased with depth in each sediment core, as did utilization of glutamic acid. Significant percentages of the total bacterial populations in cold sediment trap samples (but not the prewarmed one or any boxcore sample) were abnormally enlarged and orange fluorescing after incubation with yeast extract and nalidixic acid under deep-sea conditions. Results indicated that in the deep sea, barophilic bacteria play a predominant role in the turnover of naturally low levels of glutamic acid, and the potential for intense microbial activity upon nutrient enrichment is more likely to occur in association with recently settled particulates, especially fecal pellets, than in buried sediments.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference24 articles.

1. In situ morphologies of deep-sea and sediment bacteria;Carlucci A. F.;Can. J. Microbiol.,1976

2. Barophilic bacteria associated with digestive tracts of abyssal holothurians;Deming J. W.;Appl. Environ. Microbiol.,1982

3. The ribonucleotide sequence of 5S rRNA from two strains of deep-sea barophilic bacteria;Deming J. W.;J. Gen. Microbiol.,1984

4. Barophilic growth of bacteria from intestinal tracts of deep-sea invertebrates;Deming J. W.;Microb. Ecol.,1981

5. Lipid composition and vertical distribution of bacteria in aerobic sediments of the Venezuela Basin;Harvey H. R.;Deep-Sea Res.,1984

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