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Temporal dynamics of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) produced in a microcosm with red tide forming algae Chattonella marina and its associated bacteria
Authors:Minoru Wada  Yukiko Takano  Saki Nagae  Yuka Ohtake  Yu Umezawa  Shinichi Nakamura  Makoto Yoshida  Yukihiko Matsuyama  Mitsunori Iwataki  Satoshi Takeshita  Tatsuya Oda
Affiliation:1.Graduate School of Fisheries and Environmental Sciences,Nagasaki University,Nagasaki,Japan;2.Graduate School of Science and Technology,Nagasaki University,Nagasaki,Japan;3.Sasebo City Government,Sasebo-Shi,Japan;4.Nagasaki Prefectural Institute of Environment and Public Health,Omura-Shi,Japan;5.Seikai National Fisheries Research Institute,Fisheries Research Agency,Nagasaki,Japan;6.Kagawa Prefectural Fisheries Experiment Station,Takamatsu-Shi,Japan;7.Asian Natural Environmental Science Center,The University of Tokyo,Tokyo,Japan;8.Joint Research Center,Nagasaki University,Nagasaki,Japan;9.Graduate school of Agriculture,Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology,Fuchu-Shi, Tokyo,Japan
Abstract:Acute and severe hypoxia associated with harmful algal bloom has become one of the major causes for the environmental deterioration of coastal areas. Although it is generally thought that a large part of the dissolved oxygen consumption at a bloom site is initiated by heterotrophic bacteria that attack organic matter derived from dead or dying algal cells, precise microbial processes leading to the hypoxia are yet to be examined. Here we show temporal dynamics of extracellular dissolved organic carbon (DOC) of the red tide forming raphidophyte Chattonella marina and bacterial populations associating with the algae under laboratory conditions. During the growth of non-axenic strains of C. marina, we monitored abundance of algae, associated bacteria, and DOC in the culture media. Bacterial cell abundance increased in response to the increase in DOC both at the beginning and the late log phase of the algal growth. Flow cytometric analysis revealed that transient increase in the percentage of respiratory-active bacterial cells also coincided with the timing of the increase in bacterial abundance and DOC. These results strongly suggest that DOC released from growing C. marina fuels respiration and growth of planktonic bacteria surrounding the algae. This has implications for the role of DOC released from C. marina bloom before the collapse in mediating interactions between neighboring algae and bacterial assemblage which may eventually lead to algal bloom-associated hypoxia.
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