Affiliation:
1. University of Delaware, College of Marine Studies, Lewes, Delaware 19958
2. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Laboratory for Hydrospheric Processes, Greenbelt, Maryland 20771
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The abundance of aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic (AAP) bacteria, cyanobacteria, and heterotrophs was examined in the Mid-Atlantic Bight and the central North Pacific Gyre using infrared fluorescence microscopy coupled with image analysis and flow cytometry. AAP bacteria comprised 5% to 16% of total prokaryotes in the Atlantic Ocean but only 5% or less in the Pacific Ocean. In the Atlantic, AAP bacterial abundance was as much as 2-fold higher than that of
Prochlorococcus
spp. and 10-fold higher than that of
Synechococcus
spp. In contrast,
Prochlorococcus
spp. outnumbered AAP bacteria 5- to 50-fold in the Pacific. In both oceans, subsurface abundance maxima occurred within the photic zone, and AAP bacteria were least abundant below the 1% light depth. The abundance of AAP bacteria rivaled some groups of strictly heterotrophic bacteria and was often higher than the abundance of known AAP bacterial genera (
Erythrobacter
and
Roseobacter
spp.). Concentrations of bacteriochlorophyll
a
(BChl
a
) were low (∼1%) compared to those of chlorophyll
a
in the North Atlantic. Although the BChl
a
content of AAP bacteria per cell was typically 20- to 250-fold lower than the divinyl-chlorophyll
a
content of
Prochlorococcus
, the pigment content of AAP bacteria approached that of
Prochlorococcus
in shelf break water. Our results suggest that AAP bacteria can be quite abundant in some oceanic regimes and that their distribution in the water column is consistent with phototrophy.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
123 articles.
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