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Nutritional importance of benthic bacteria for deep‐sea nematodes from the Arctic ice margin: Results of an isotope tracer experiment
Author(s) -
Guilini Katja,
Oevelen Dick Van,
Soetaert Karline,
Middelburg Jack J.,
Vanreusela Ann
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
limnology and oceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 197
eISSN - 1939-5590
pISSN - 0024-3590
DOI - 10.4319/lo.2010.55.5.1977
Subject(s) - isotopes of carbon , environmental chemistry , stable isotope ratio , benthic zone , deep sea , isotope , meiobenthos , algae , dissolved organic carbon , sediment , microbial population biology , isotopes of nitrogen , stable isotope probing , biology , chemistry , bacteria , ecology , total organic carbon , nitrogen , microorganism , paleontology , physics , genetics , quantum mechanics , fishery , organic chemistry
A stable isotope ( 13 C)‐labeling experiment was performed to quantify the importance of bacterial carbon as a food source for an Arctic deep‐sea nematode community. Bacterial functional groups were isotopically enriched with 13 C‐glucose, 13 C‐acetate, 13 C‐bicarbonate, and 13 C‐amino acids injected into sediments collected from 1280 m depth at 79°N, 6°E, west of Svalbard. Incorporation of the 13 C label into bacterial phospholipid‐derived fatty acids (PLFAs) and nematodes in the top 5 cm of the sediment was monitored over a 7‐d period. The 13 C dynamics of nematodes was fitted with a simple isotope turnover model to derive the importance of the different bacterial functional groups as carbon sources for the nematodes. The different substrates clearly labeled different bacterial groups as evidenced by differential labeling of the PLFA patterns. The deep‐sea nematode community incorporated a very limited amount of the label, and the isotope turnover model showed that the dynamics of the isotope transfer could not be attributed to bacterivory. The low enrichment of nematodes suggests a limited passive uptake of injected 13 C‐labeled substrates. The lack of accumulation suggests that the injected 13 C‐labeled dissolved organic carbon compounds are not important as carbon sources for deep‐sea nematodes. Since earlier studies with isotopically enriched algae also found limited uptake by nematodes, the food sources of deep‐sea nematodes remain unclear.