Nitrogen losses in anoxic marine sediments driven by Thioploca–anammox bacterial consortia
Author(s) -
Maria G. Prokopenko,
Marissa B. Hirst,
Loreto De Brabandere,
Daniel J P Lawrence,
William M. Berelson,
Julie Granger,
Bonnie X. Chang,
Scott C. Dawson,
Edward J. Crane,
Lauren S. Chong,
Bo Thamdrup,
Amy TownsendSmall,
Daniel M. Sigman
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature12365
Subject(s) - anoxic waters , anammox , benthic zone , biogeochemical cycle , nitrogen cycle , denitrification , environmental chemistry , archaea , nitrate , sediment , organic matter , nitrogen , chemistry , ecology , biology , bacteria , denitrifying bacteria , paleontology , organic chemistry
Ninety per cent of marine organic matter burial occurs in continental margin sediments, where a substantial fraction of organic carbon escapes oxidation and enters long-term geologic storage within sedimentary rocks. In such environments, microbial metabolism is limited by the diffusive supply of electron acceptors. One strategy to optimize energy yields in a resource-limited habitat is symbiotic metabolite exchange among microbial associations. Thermodynamic and geochemical considerations indicate that microbial co-metabolisms are likely to play a critical part in sedimentary organic carbon cycling. Yet only one association, between methanotrophic archaea and sulphate-reducing bacteria, has been demonstrated in marine sediments in situ, and little is known of the role of microbial symbiotic interactions in other sedimentary biogeochemical cycles. Here we report in situ molecular and incubation-based evidence for a novel symbiotic consortium between two chemolithotrophic bacteria--anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria and the nitrate-sequestering sulphur-oxidizing Thioploca species--in anoxic sediments of the Soledad basin at the Mexican Pacific margin. A mass balance of benthic solute fluxes and the corresponding nitrogen isotope composition of nitrate and ammonium fluxes indicate that anammox bacteria rely on Thioploca species for the supply of metabolic substrates and account for about 57 ± 21 per cent of the total benthic N2 production. We show that Thioploca-anammox symbiosis intensifies benthic fixed nitrogen losses in anoxic sediments, bypassing diffusion-imposed limitations by efficiently coupling the carbon, nitrogen and sulphur cycles.
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