Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Institute of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602, and University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia 313272
Abstract
Specifically radiolabeled [
14
C-lignin]lignocellulose and [
14
C-polysaccharide]lignocellulose from the salt-marsh cordgrass
Spartina alterniflora
were incubated with an intact salt-marsh sediment microbial assemblage, with a mixed (size-fractionated) bacterial assemblage, and with each of three marine fungi,
Buergenerula spartinae, Phaeosphaeria typharum
, and
Leptosphaeria obiones
, isolated from decaying
S. alterniflora.
The bacterial assemblage alone mineralized the lignin and polysaccharide components of
S. alterniflora
lignocellulose at approximately the same rate as did intact salt-marsh sediment inocula. The polysaccharide component was mineralized twice as fast as the lignin component; after 23 days of incubation, ca. 10% of the lignin component and 20% of the polysaccharide component of
S. alterniflora
lignocellulose were mineralized. Relative to the total sediment and bacterial inocula, the three species of fungi mediated only very slow mineralization of the lignin and polysaccharide components of
S. alterniflora
lignocellulose. Experiments with uniformly
14
C-labeled
S. alterniflora
material indicated that the three fungi and the bacterial assemblage were capable of degrading the non-lignocellulosic fraction of
S. alterniflora
material, but only the bacterial assemblage significantly degraded the lignocellulosic fraction. Our results suggest that bacteria are the predominant degraders of lignocellulosic detritus in salt-marsh sediments.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Reference24 articles.
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4. Crawford R. L. 1981. Lignin biodegradation and transformation. Wileyinterscience New York.
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