Alternation of heterotrophic bacterial and archaeal production along nitrogen and salinity gradients in coastal wetlands

Biogeosciences Discussions(2020)

引用 1|浏览11
暂无评分
摘要
Abstract. Coastal wetlands are valuable ecosystems with high biological productivity and diversity, which provide ecosystem services such as a reduction in the inputs of nitrogen into coastal waters, and storage of organic carbon, thus, acting as net carbon sinks. The rise of sea level as a consequence of climatic warming will salinize many coastal wetlands, but there is considerable uncertainty about how salinization will affect microbial communities and biogeochemical processes. We analyzed prokaryotic abundance and heterotrophic bacterial and archaeal production in 112 ponds within nine coastal wetlands from the western Mediterranean coast. We determined the main drivers of prokaryotic abundance and production in these wetlands using generalized linear models (GLMs). The best GLM, including all the coastal wetlands, indicated that the concentration of total dissolved nitrogen (TDN) positively affected the abundance of heterotrophic prokaryotes and heterotrophic archaeal production. In contrast, heterotrophic bacterial production was negatively related to TDN. This negative relationship appeared to be mediated by salinity and virus abundance. Heterotrophic bacterial production declined as salinity, and virus abundance, increased. We observed a switch from heterotrophic bacterial production towards heterotrophic archaeal production as salinity and virus abundance increased. Our results imply that microbial activity will change from bacterial-dominated processes to archaeal-dominated processes along with increases of nitrogen inputs and salinity. However, more studies are required to link the mineralization rates of dissolved nitrogen and organic carbon with specific archaeal taxa, to enable more accurate predictions on future scenarios of wetlands salinization and anthropogenic nitrogen inputs.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要