Differential response of high-elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment.

Nutrient enrichment of high-elevation freshwater ecosystems by atmospheric deposition is increasing worldwide, and bacteria are a key conduit for the metabolism of organic matter in these oligotrophic environments. We conducted two distinct in situ microcosm experiments in a high-elevation lake (Eme...

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Main Authors: Craig E Nelson, Craig A Carlson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3069079?pdf=render
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author Craig E Nelson
Craig A Carlson
author_facet Craig E Nelson
Craig A Carlson
author_sort Craig E Nelson
collection DOAJ
description Nutrient enrichment of high-elevation freshwater ecosystems by atmospheric deposition is increasing worldwide, and bacteria are a key conduit for the metabolism of organic matter in these oligotrophic environments. We conducted two distinct in situ microcosm experiments in a high-elevation lake (Emerald Lake, Sierra Nevada, California, USA) to evaluate responses in bacterioplankton growth, carbon utilization, and community structure to short-term enrichment by nitrate and phosphate. The first experiment, conducted just following ice-off, employed dark dilution culture to directly assess the impact of nutrients on bacterioplankton growth and consumption of terrigenous dissolved organic matter during snowmelt. The second experiment, conducted in transparent microcosms during autumn overturn, examined how bacterioplankton in unmanipulated microbial communities responded to nutrients concomitant with increasing phytoplankton-derived organic matter. In both experiments, phosphate enrichment (but not nitrate) caused significant increases in bacterioplankton growth, changed particulate organic stoichiometry, and induced shifts in bacterial community composition, including consistent declines in the relative abundance of Actinobacteria. The dark dilution culture showed a significant increase in dissolved organic carbon removal in response to phosphate enrichment. In transparent microcosms nutrient enrichment had no effect on concentrations of chlorophyll, carbon, or the fluorescence characteristics of dissolved organic matter, suggesting that bacterioplankton responses were independent of phytoplankton responses. These results demonstrate that bacterioplankton communities in unproductive high-elevation habitats can rapidly alter their taxonomic composition and metabolism in response to short-term phosphate enrichment. Our results reinforce the key role that phosphorus plays in oligotrophic lake ecosystems, clarify the nature of bacterioplankton nutrient limitation, and emphasize that evaluation of eutrophication in these habitats should incorporate heterotrophic microbial communities and processes.
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spelling doaj.art-c1e96dcaae87483f9c0e2910901769f72022-12-21T19:12:22ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0163e1832010.1371/journal.pone.0018320Differential response of high-elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment.Craig E NelsonCraig A CarlsonNutrient enrichment of high-elevation freshwater ecosystems by atmospheric deposition is increasing worldwide, and bacteria are a key conduit for the metabolism of organic matter in these oligotrophic environments. We conducted two distinct in situ microcosm experiments in a high-elevation lake (Emerald Lake, Sierra Nevada, California, USA) to evaluate responses in bacterioplankton growth, carbon utilization, and community structure to short-term enrichment by nitrate and phosphate. The first experiment, conducted just following ice-off, employed dark dilution culture to directly assess the impact of nutrients on bacterioplankton growth and consumption of terrigenous dissolved organic matter during snowmelt. The second experiment, conducted in transparent microcosms during autumn overturn, examined how bacterioplankton in unmanipulated microbial communities responded to nutrients concomitant with increasing phytoplankton-derived organic matter. In both experiments, phosphate enrichment (but not nitrate) caused significant increases in bacterioplankton growth, changed particulate organic stoichiometry, and induced shifts in bacterial community composition, including consistent declines in the relative abundance of Actinobacteria. The dark dilution culture showed a significant increase in dissolved organic carbon removal in response to phosphate enrichment. In transparent microcosms nutrient enrichment had no effect on concentrations of chlorophyll, carbon, or the fluorescence characteristics of dissolved organic matter, suggesting that bacterioplankton responses were independent of phytoplankton responses. These results demonstrate that bacterioplankton communities in unproductive high-elevation habitats can rapidly alter their taxonomic composition and metabolism in response to short-term phosphate enrichment. Our results reinforce the key role that phosphorus plays in oligotrophic lake ecosystems, clarify the nature of bacterioplankton nutrient limitation, and emphasize that evaluation of eutrophication in these habitats should incorporate heterotrophic microbial communities and processes.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3069079?pdf=render
spellingShingle Craig E Nelson
Craig A Carlson
Differential response of high-elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment.
PLoS ONE
title Differential response of high-elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment.
title_full Differential response of high-elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment.
title_fullStr Differential response of high-elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment.
title_full_unstemmed Differential response of high-elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment.
title_short Differential response of high-elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment.
title_sort differential response of high elevation planktonic bacterial community structure and metabolism to experimental nutrient enrichment
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3069079?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT craigenelson differentialresponseofhighelevationplanktonicbacterialcommunitystructureandmetabolismtoexperimentalnutrientenrichment
AT craigacarlson differentialresponseofhighelevationplanktonicbacterialcommunitystructureandmetabolismtoexperimentalnutrientenrichment