| Literature DB >> 31395953 |
Ulisse Cardini1,2,3, Marco Bartoli4,5, Sebastian Lücker6, Maria Mooshammer7,8, Julia Polzin7, Raymond W Lee9, Vesna Micić10, Thilo Hofmann10, Miriam Weber11,12, Jillian M Petersen13.
Abstract
In many seagrass sediments, lucinid bivalves and their sulfur-oxidizing symbionts are thought to underpin key ecosystem functions, but little is known about their role in nutrient cycles, particularly nitrogen. We used natural stable isotopes, elemental analyses, and stable isotope probing to study the ecological stoichiometry of a lucinid symbiosis in spring and fall. Chemoautotrophy appeared to dominate in fall, when chemoautotrophic carbon fixation rates were up to one order of magnitude higher as compared with the spring, suggesting a flexible nutritional mutualism. In fall, an isotope pool dilution experiment revealed carbon limitation of the symbiosis and ammonium excretion rates up to tenfold higher compared with fluxes reported for nonsymbiotic marine bivalves. These results provide evidence that lucinid bivalves can contribute substantial amounts of ammonium to the ecosystem. Given the preference of seagrasses for this nitrogen source, lucinid bivalves' contribution may boost productivity of these important blue carbon ecosystems.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31395953 PMCID: PMC6863832 DOI: 10.1038/s41396-019-0486-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISME J ISSN: 1751-7362 Impact factor: 10.302
Fig. 1Results from 13C–HCO3− and 15N–N2 isotope probing experiments: a Carbon and b dinitrogen fixation by the microbial symbionts (nmol C (or N) g gill tissue−1 h−1 ± SE, n = 5). Sampling points are color-coded in purple (April) and cyan (October). Different lowercase letters indicate significant differences (p < 0.05, PERMANOVA)
Fig. 2Results from freshly sampled bivalve specimens: a C:N ratio (± SE, n = 10) of symbiont-free (Symb-) and symbiont-hosting (Symb+) animal tissues; b Symbiotic tissue mass index—SMI. The SMI indicates the proportion of symbiont-hosting gill biomass (mg mm−1 ± SE, n = 10; see Supplementary Methods for details on how this index was calculated); c Biplot of the natural abundance of 13C and 15N isotopes showing the total amount of niche space occupied (total area, dashed polygons) and the isotopic niche width (standard ellipse area, solid ellipses) as proxies of trophic specialization of symbiont-free (squares) and symbiont-hosting (triangles) animal tissues. Sampling points are color-coded in purple (April) and cyan (October). Different lowercase letters indicate significant differences (p < 0.05, PERMANOVA)