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Dilution cultivation of marine heterotrophic bacteria abundant after a spring phytoplankton bloom in the N orth S ea
Author(s) -
Hahnke Richard L.,
Bennke Christin M.,
Fuchs Bernhard M.,
Mann Alexander J.,
Rhiel Erhard,
Teeling Hanno,
Amann Rudolf,
Harder Jens
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1111/1462-2920.12479
Subject(s) - bacterioplankton , biology , phytoplankton , diatom , spring bloom , algae , algal bloom , botany , bloom , plankton , ecology , nutrient
Summary The roles of individual bacterioplankton species in the re‐mineralization of algal biomass are poorly understood. Evidence from molecular data had indicated that a spring diatom bloom in the G erman B ight of the N orth S ea in 2009 was followed by a rapid succession of uncultivated bacterioplankton species, including members of the genera U lvibacter , F ormosa , P olaribacter (class F lavobacteria ) and R einekea (class G ammaproteobacteria) . We isolated strains from the same site during the diatom bloom in spring 2010 using dilution cultivation in an artificial seawater medium with micromolar substrate and nutrient concentrations. Flow cytometry demonstrated growth from single cells to densities of 10 4 –10 6 cells ml –1 and a culturability of 35%. Novel F ormosa , P olaribacter and R einekea strains were isolated and had 16 S r RNA gene sequence identities of > 99.8% with bacterioplankton in spring or summer 2009. Genomes of selected isolates were draft sequenced and used for read recruitment of metagenomes from bacterioplankton in 2009. Metagenome reads covered 93% of a F ormosa clade B , 91% of a R einekea and 74% of a F ormosa clade A genome, applying a ≥ 94.5% nucleotide identity threshold. These novel strains represent abundant bacterioplankton species thriving on coastal phytoplankton blooms in the N orth S ea.