Bertics Victoria J, Ziebis Wiebke
Department of Biological Sciences, Marine Environmental Biology Section, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
ISME J. 2009 Nov;3(11):1269-85. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2009.62. Epub 2009 May 21.
We used a combination of field and laboratory approaches to address how the bioturbation activity of two crustaceans, the ghost shrimp Neotrypaea californiensis and the fiddler crab Uca crenulata, affects the microbial diversity in the seabed of a coastal lagoon (Catalina Harbor, Santa Catalina Island, CA, USA). Detailed geochemical analyses, including oxygen microsensor measurements, were performed to characterize environmental parameters. We used a whole-assemblage fingerprinting approach (ARISA: amplified ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis) to compare bacterial diversity along geochemical gradients and in relation to subsurface microniches. The two crustaceans have different burrowing behaviors. The ghost shrimp maintains complex, deep-reaching burrows and permanently lives subterranean, supplying its burrow with oxygen-rich water. In contrast, the fiddler crab constructs simpler, J-shaped burrows, which it does not inhabit permanently and does not actively ventilate. Our goal was to address how varying environmental parameters affect benthic microbial communities. An important question in benthic microbial ecology has been whether burrows support similar or unique communities compared with the sediment surface. Our results showed that sediment surface microbial communities are distinct from subsurface assemblages and that different burrow types support diverse bacterial taxa. Statistical comparisons by canonical correspondence analysis indicated that the availability of oxidants (oxygen, nitrate, ferric iron) play a key role in determining the presence and abundance of different taxa. When geochemical parameters were alike, microbial communities associated with burrows showed significant similarity to sediment surface communities. Our study provides implications on the community structure of microbial communities in marine sediments and the factors controlling their distribution.
我们采用了野外和实验室相结合的方法,以研究两种甲壳类动物,即加州仿对虾(Neotrypaea californiensis)和细纹方蟹(Uca crenulata)的生物扰动活动如何影响美国加利福尼亚州圣卡塔利娜岛卡塔利娜港一个沿海泻湖海床中的微生物多样性。我们进行了详细的地球化学分析,包括氧微传感器测量,以表征环境参数。我们使用了全群落指纹分析方法(ARISA:扩增核糖体基因间隔区分析),来比较沿地球化学梯度以及与地下微生境相关的细菌多样性。这两种甲壳类动物具有不同的掘穴行为。加州仿对虾会挖掘复杂且深入的洞穴,并永久生活在地下,为其洞穴供应富含氧气的水。相比之下,细纹方蟹构建的洞穴较为简单,呈J形,它不会永久居住在其中,也不会主动通风。我们的目标是研究不同的环境参数如何影响底栖微生物群落。底栖微生物生态学中的一个重要问题是,与沉积物表面相比,洞穴所支持的群落是相似还是独特。我们的结果表明,沉积物表面的微生物群落与地下群落不同,并且不同类型的洞穴支持不同的细菌类群。通过典范对应分析进行的统计比较表明,氧化剂(氧气、硝酸盐、三价铁)的可用性在决定不同类群的存在和丰度方面起着关键作用。当地球化学参数相似时,与洞穴相关的微生物群落与沉积物表面群落表现出显著的相似性。我们的研究对海洋沉积物中微生物群落的结构及其分布控制因素具有启示意义。