Document of bibliographic reference 99150

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Bacterial carbon sources in coastal sediments: a cross-system analysis based on stable isotope data of biomarkers
Abstract
Coastal ecosystems are typically highly productive, and the sediments in these systems receive organic matter from a variety of local and imported sources. To assess if general patterns are present in the origin of carbon sources for sedimentary bacteria and their relation to the origin of the sediment organic carbon pool, we compiled both literature and new data on d13C of bacterial biomarkers (the phospholipid derived fatty acids i+a15:0), along with d13C data on sediment organic carbon (d13CTOC) and macrophyte biomass from a variety of typical near-coastal systems. These systems included mangroves, salt marshes (both C3 and C4-dominated sites), seagrass beds, and macroalgae-based systems, as well as unvegetated sediments. First, our d13Ci+a15:0 data showed large variability over the entire range of d13CTOC, indicating that in many settings, bacteria may depend on carbon derived from various origins. Secondly, systems where local macrophyte production is the major supplier of organic carbon for in situ decomposition are generally limited to organic carbon-rich, peaty sites (TOC>10 wt%), which are likely to make up only a small part of the global area of vegetated coastal systems. These carbon-rich sediments also provided a field based estimate of isotopic fractionation between bacterial carbon sources and biomarkers (-3.7±2.1), which is similar to the expected value of about -3 associated with the biosynthesis of fatty acids. Thirdly, only in systems with low TOC (below ~1 wt%), we consistently found that bacteria were selectively utilizing an isotopically enriched carbon source, which may be root exudates but more likely is derived from microphytobenthos. In other systems with between ~1 and 10 wt% TOC, bacteria appear to show on average little selectivity and d13Ci+a15:0 data generally follow the d13CTOC, even in systems where the TOC is a mixture of algal and macrophyte sources that generally are believed to have a very different degradability.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000239461000005
Bibliographic citation
Bouillon, S.; Boschker, H.T.S. (2006). Bacterial carbon sources in coastal sediments: a cross-system analysis based on stable isotope data of biomarkers. Biogeosciences 3(2): 175-185 + suppl.
location created
Pleinlaan 2
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Steven Bouillon
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7669-2929
Affiliation
Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Faculteit Wetenschappen & Bio-ingenieurswetenschappen; Vakgroep Chemie; Analytical, Environmental and Geochemistry
author
Name
Henricus Boschker
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0947-7919

Links

referenced creativework
type
accessURL
www.biogeosciences.net/3/175/2006/bg-3-175-2006.pdf

thesaurus terms

term
Biomarkers (term code: 9475 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)
Sediments (term code: 7403 - defined in term set: ASFA Thesaurus List)

Document metadata

date created
2006-05-24
date modified
2019-09-04