Microbial activity and carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus content in a subtropical seagrass estuary (Florida Bay): evidenc

  • PDF / 568,911 Bytes
  • 13 Pages / 595 x 791 pts Page_size
  • 41 Downloads / 207 Views

DOWNLOAD

REPORT


ORIGINAL PAPER

Microbial activity and carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus content in a subtropical seagrass estuary (Florida Bay): evidence for limited bacterial use of seagrass production Clayton J. Williams · Joseph N. Boyer · Frank J. Jochem

Received: 21 April 2008 / Accepted: 6 November 2008 / Published online: 26 November 2008 © Springer-Verlag 2008

Abstract Bacterial abundance, production, and extracellular enzyme activity were determined in the shallow water column, in the epiphytic community of Thalassia testudinum, and at the sediment surface along with total carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus in Florida Bay, a subtropical seagrass estuary. Data were statistically reduced by principle components analysis (PCA) and multidimensional scaling and related to T. testudinum leaf total phosphorus content and phytoplankton biomass. Each zone (i.e., pelagic, epiphytic, and surface sediment community) was signiWcantly dissimilar to each other (Global R = 0.65). Pelagic aminopeptidase and sum of carbon hydrolytic enzyme (esterase, peptidase, and - and -glucosidase) activities ranged from 8 to 284 mg N m¡2 day¡1 and 113–1,671 mg C m¡2 day¡1, respectively, and were 1–3 orders of magnitude higher than epiphytic and sediment surface activities. Due to the phosphorus-limited nature of Florida Bay, alkaline phosphatase activity was similar between pelagic (51–710 mg P m¡2 day¡1) and sediment (77–224 mg P m¡2 day¡1) zones but lower in the epiphytes (1.1–5.2 mg P m¡2 day¡1). Total (and/or organic) C (111–311 g C m¡2), N (9.4–27.2 g N m¡2), and P (212–1,623 mg P m¡2) content were the highest in the sediment surface and typically the lowest in the seagrass epiphytes, ranging from 0.6 to 8.7 g C m¡2, 0.02–0.99 g N m¡2, and 0.5–43.5 mg P m¡2. Unlike nutrient

Communicated by U. Sommer. C. J. Williams · F. J. Jochem (&) Marine Biology Program, Florida International University, 3000 N.E. 151st Street, North Miami, FL 33181, USA e-mail: [email protected] J. N. Boyer Southeast Environmental Research Center, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA

content and enzyme activities, bacterial production was highest in the epiphytes (8.0–235.1 mg C m¡2 day¡1) and sediment surface (11.5–233.2 mg C m¡2 day¡1) and low in the water column (1.6–85.6 mg C m¡2 day¡1). At an assumed 50% bacterial growth eYciency, for example, extracellular enzyme hydrolysis could supply 1.8 and 69% of epiphytic and sediment bacteria carbon demand, respectively, while pelagic bacteria could fulWll their carbon demand completely by enzyme-hydrolyzable organic matter. Similarly, previously measured T. testudinum extracellular photosynthetic carbon exudation rates could not satisfy epiphytic and sediment surface bacterial carbon demand, suggesting that epiphytic algae and microphytobenthos might provide usable substrates to support high benthic bacterial production rates. PCA revealed that T. testudinum nutrient content was related positively to epiphytic nutrient content and carbon hydrolase activity in the sediment, but unrelated to pelagic variables. Ph