| Literature DB >> 29934529 |
Kaicheng Zhu1,2, Federico M Lauro3,4, Haibin Su5,6.
Abstract
In meromictic lakes, the water column is stratified into distinguishable steady layers with different physico-chemical properties. The bottom portion, known as monimolimnion, has been studied for the functional stratification of microbial populations. Recent experiments have reported the profiles of bacterial and nutrient spatial distributions, but quantitative understanding is invoked to unravel the underlying mechanism of maintaining the discrete spatial organization. Here a reaction-diffusion model is developed to highlight the spatial pattern coupled with the light-driven metabolism of bacteria, which is resilient to a wide range of dynamical correlation between bacterial and nutrient species at the molecular level. Particularly, exact analytical solutions of the system are presented together with numerical results, in a good agreement with measurements in Ace lake and Rogoznica lake. Furthermore, one quantitative prediction is reported here on the dynamics of the seasonal stratification patterns in Ace lake. The active role played by the bacterial metabolism at microscale clearly shapes the biogeochemistry landscape of lake-wide ecology at macroscale.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29934529 PMCID: PMC6015037 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-27973-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic view of the meromictic lake system (a) and the sulfur cycle in the monimolimnion (b). The GSB and SRB take separate stratification layers at neighboring depths.
The exponential factors in the expression of bacterial concentrations (Eq. 10).
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The six independent solutions correspond to different biological constraints: (1) the saturation layer of GSB together with SRB where there is strong light intensity but poor nutrient supply; (2) the saturation layer of GSB where both light and nutrient supply is enough; (3) the saturation layer of GSB and SRB where the light intensity decays below the critical value supporting a GSB full saturation; (4) the unsaturated region where light intensity is strong enough to trigger photosynthesis; (5) the saturation layer of GSB and SRB without light supply; (6) the unsaturated area without light supply.
Figure 2Concentration profiles of bacteria and nutrient species from theory and experiments. (a) The nutrient concentration profiles of Ace lake are fitted from reported data[3]. We plot the simulated seasonal dynamics of both GSB and SRB distributions in the summer (b) and the winter (c) based on the rRNA analysis of SRB in Rogoznica lake[9]. The analytical results of our model are presented by solid lines, and the experimental data are denoted by square/diamond shaped points. The blue dash line shows the position of the oxycline. The green dash lines and the violet dash lines denote the saturation depths of GSB and SRB respectively.