Publication | Open Access
Diversity and activity of epiphytic nitrogen-fixers on standing dead stems of the salt marsh grass Spartina alterniflora
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Citations
32
References
2005
Year
Microbial communities growing on the surfaces of standing dead stems of salt marsh grasses contribute to fixation of atmospheric nitrogen (N 2 ) in these N-limited intertidal systems. Salt marshes in North Carolina, USA, have been shown to exhibit N 2 fixation throughout the growth season, but the composition of these diazotrophic communities is poorly known. This study investigated the diversity of the epiphytic N 2 -fixing microbial community on the surfaces of dead stems (shoots) of the cord grass Spartina alterniflora in a salt marsh in North Carolina. Sequencing of the nifH gene and microscopy showed that a diverse diazotrophic community consisting of at least 8 diazotrophic cyanobacterial taxa, as well as an assemblage of -, -, and -proteobacteria, was present. Half of the recovered unique nifH sequences fell into the cluster with anaerobes. N 2 -fixation rates under natural irradiance ranged from 0.001 to 2.58 nmol C 2 H 4 g chl a -1 h -1 (0.07 to 206 nmol C 2 H 4 cm -2 h -1 ) and decreased from spring to fall. Nitrogen-fixation rates had a positive relationship with chlorophyll a, suggesting phototrophs contributed to N 2 fixation. The dominant diazotrophs in this study differed from epiphytic communities described elsewhere in the southeast United States, suggesting regional differences are present in the diversity of these communities.
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