Enumeration of Fe(II)-oxidizing and Fe(III)-reducing bacteria in the root zone of wetland plants: Implications for a rhizosphere iron cycle
نویسندگان
چکیده
Iron plaque occurs on the roots of most wetland and submersed aquatic plant species and is a large pool of oxidized Fe(III) in some environments. Because plaque formation in wetlands with circumneutral pH has been largely assumed to be an abiotic process, no systematic effort has been made to describe plaque-associated microbial communities or their role in plaque deposition. We hypothesized that Fe(II)-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) and Fe(III)-reducing bacteria (FeRB) are abundant in the rhizosphere of wetland plants across a wide range of biogeochemical environments. In a survey of 13 wetland and aquatic habitats in the Mid-Atlantic region, FeOB were present in the rhizosphere of 92% of the plant specimens collected (n = 37), representing 25 plant species. In a subsequent study at six of these sites, bacterial abundances were determined in the rhizosphere and bulk soil using the most probable number technique. The soil had significantly more total bacteria than the roots on a dry mass basis (1.4 × 10 cells/g soil vs. 8.6 × 10 cells/g root; p < 0.05). The absolute abundance of aerobic, lithotrophic FeOB was higher in the soil than in the rhizosphere (3.7 × 10 /g soil vs. 5.9 × 10 /g root; p < 0.05), but there was no statistical difference between these habitats in terms of relative abundance ( 1% of the total cell number). In the rhizosphere, FeRB accounted for an average of 12% of all bacterial cells while in the soil they accounted for < 1% of the total bacteria. We concluded that FeOB are ubiquitous and abundant in wetland ecosystems, and that FeRB are dominant members of the rhizosphere microbial community. These observations provide a strong rationale for quantifying the contribution of FeOB to rhizosphere Fe(II) oxidation rates, and investigating the combined role of FeOB and FeRB in a rhizosphere iron cycle. Abbreviations: DCB – dithionite-citrate-bicarbonate, FeOB – Fe(II)-oxidizing bacteria, FeRB – Fe(III)reducing bacteria, ROL – radial O2 loss, MPN – most probable number, MWMM – modified Wolfe’s mineral media, PVC – polyvinyl chloride, SAV – submerged aquatic vegetation, SERC – Smithsonian Environmental Research Center Biogeochemistry 64: 77–96, 2003. © 2003 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands.
منابع مشابه
Rhizosphere Iron (III) Deposition and Reduction in a Juncus effusus L.-Dominated Wetland
soil and rates of radial oxygen loss. Radial O2 loss is in turn influenced by plant activity (Bedford et al., 1991; Iron (III) plaque forms on the roots of wetland plants from the Kuehn and Suberkropp, 1998) and morphological charreaction of Fe(II) with O2 released by roots. Recent laboratory studies acteristics such as suberized and lignified roots (Armhave shown that Fe plaque is more rapidly...
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