Litcius/Paper detail

Kelp deposition changes mineralization pathways and microbial communities in a sandy beach

Marit R. van Erk, Dimitri V. Meier, Timothy G. Ferdelman, Jens Harder, Ingeborg Bussmann, Dirk de Beer

2020Limnology and Oceanography33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract We investigated the impact of kelp deposition on the geochemistry and microbial community composition of beach sands on the island of Helgoland (North Sea). The composition of the microbial community at a beach with regular kelp deposition appeared shaped by this regular input of organic material, as indicated by significantly higher proportions of aerobic degraders, fermenters, and sulfur cycling microorganisms. Rapid degradation of deposited kelp by this community leads to high levels of dissolved organic and inorganic carbon and nutrients, a lower pH and anoxia. Aerobic respiration, fermentation, Fe‐ and SO 4 2− reduction, and methanogenesis were strongly enhanced, with SO 4 2− reduction being the main process in kelp degradation. SO 4 2− reduction rates increased 20‐ to 25‐fold upon addition of kelp. The main route of electrons from kelp to SO 4 2− was not via CO and H 2 , as expected, but via organic fermentation products. O 2 supply by the tides was not sufficient and reduced intermediates escaped from the sediment with tidal water retraction. The resulting extremely high levels of free sulfide (>10 mmol L −1 ) lead to abundant filamentous growth of sulfur‐oxidizing bacteria largely composed of a rare O 2 ‐adapted Sulfurovum lacking the expected denitrification genes. Our results show that regular kelp deposition strongly enhances the thermodynamic disequilibrium in the beach sand habitat, leading to a dramatic enhancement of the sulfur cycle.

Topics & Concepts

KelpEnvironmental chemistryMicrobial population biologyMineralization (soil science)Anoxic watersDeposition (geology)ChemistryEcologySedimentBiologyBacteriaPaleontologyGeneticsSoil waterCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsMarine and coastal plant biologyMarine and coastal ecosystems