Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Connecticut College, New London, Connecticut
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Diversity and abundance of ammonia-oxidizing
Betaproteobacteria
(β-AOB) and archaea (AOA) were investigated in a New England salt marsh at sites dominated by short or tall
Spartina alterniflora
(SAS and SAT sites, respectively) or
Spartina patens
(SP site). AOA
amoA
gene richness was higher than β-AOB
amoA
richness at SAT and SP, but AOA and β-AOB richness were similar at SAS. β-AOB
amoA
clone libraries were composed exclusively of
Nitrosospira
-like
amoA
genes. AOA
amoA
genes at SAT and SP were equally distributed between the water column/sediment and soil/sediment clades, while AOA
amoA
sequences at SAS were primarily affiliated with the water column/sediment clade. At all three site types, AOA were always more abundant than β-AOB based on quantitative PCR of
amoA
genes. At some sites, we detected 10
9
AOA
amoA
gene copies g of sediment
−1
. Ratios of AOA to β-AOB varied over 2 orders of magnitude among sites and sampling dates. Nevertheless, abundances of AOA and β-AOB
amoA
genes were highly correlated. Abundance of 16S rRNA genes affiliated with
Nitrosopumilus maritimus
,
Crenarchaeota
group I.1b, and pSL12 were positively correlated with AOA
amoA
abundance, but ratios of
amoA
to 16S rRNA genes varied among sites. We also observed a significant effect of pH on AOA abundance and a significant salinity effect on both AOA and β-ΑΟΒ abundance. Our results expand the distribution of AOA to salt marshes, and the high numbers of AOA at some sites suggest that salt marsh sediments serve as an important habitat for AOA.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
108 articles.
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