Sewage outburst triggers Trichodesmium bloom and enhance N2 fixation rates

Abstract The southeastern Mediterranean Sea (SEMS) is a warm and sunlit marine environment with low ambient N concentration, thus considered ideal for diazotrophy by autotrophic diazotrophs such as Trichodesmium. Despite the favorable conditions, N2 fixation rates are often low and Trichodesmium has...

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Main Authors: Eyal Rahav, Edo Bar-Zeev
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-06-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04622-8
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spelling doaj-291884fd722f40e18c2d67475e960f8f2020-12-08T02:46:01ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222017-06-01711810.1038/s41598-017-04622-8Sewage outburst triggers Trichodesmium bloom and enhance N2 fixation ratesEyal Rahav0Edo Bar-Zeev1National Institute of Oceanography, Israel Oceanographic and Limnological ResearchThe Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research (ZIWR), Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Sede Boqer CampusAbstract The southeastern Mediterranean Sea (SEMS) is a warm and sunlit marine environment with low ambient N concentration, thus considered ideal for diazotrophy by autotrophic diazotrophs such as Trichodesmium. Despite the favorable conditions, N2 fixation rates are often low and Trichodesmium has hardly been spotted in the SEMS. This study reports on the occurrence of a Trichodesmium bloom in the SEMS which was ascribed to T. erythraeum according to DNA fingerprinting of the nifH gene. We found that this bloom (1407 ± 983 cells L−1) was triggered by an intense outburst of raw sewage that supplied high concentrations of N, P and dissolved organic carbon (DOC), which resulted in low N:P (~12:1) and exceptionally high C:P (~1340:1) ratios. We surmise that these conditions provided favorable conditions for Trichodesmium bloom to form via mixotrophic metabolism. As a result, a fourfold increase in N2 fixation was recorded, which contributed ~70% to new primary production and spur a sharp increase in phytoplankton activity and biomass. The conclusions of this study point on a new paradigm for bloom-forming T. erythraeum which is tightly linked to anthropogenic sources and prompt microbial productivity in oligotrophic marine environments such as the SEMS.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04622-8
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eyal Rahav
Edo Bar-Zeev
spellingShingle Eyal Rahav
Edo Bar-Zeev
Sewage outburst triggers Trichodesmium bloom and enhance N2 fixation rates
Scientific Reports
author_facet Eyal Rahav
Edo Bar-Zeev
author_sort Eyal Rahav
title Sewage outburst triggers Trichodesmium bloom and enhance N2 fixation rates
title_short Sewage outburst triggers Trichodesmium bloom and enhance N2 fixation rates
title_full Sewage outburst triggers Trichodesmium bloom and enhance N2 fixation rates
title_fullStr Sewage outburst triggers Trichodesmium bloom and enhance N2 fixation rates
title_full_unstemmed Sewage outburst triggers Trichodesmium bloom and enhance N2 fixation rates
title_sort sewage outburst triggers trichodesmium bloom and enhance n2 fixation rates
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Abstract The southeastern Mediterranean Sea (SEMS) is a warm and sunlit marine environment with low ambient N concentration, thus considered ideal for diazotrophy by autotrophic diazotrophs such as Trichodesmium. Despite the favorable conditions, N2 fixation rates are often low and Trichodesmium has hardly been spotted in the SEMS. This study reports on the occurrence of a Trichodesmium bloom in the SEMS which was ascribed to T. erythraeum according to DNA fingerprinting of the nifH gene. We found that this bloom (1407 ± 983 cells L−1) was triggered by an intense outburst of raw sewage that supplied high concentrations of N, P and dissolved organic carbon (DOC), which resulted in low N:P (~12:1) and exceptionally high C:P (~1340:1) ratios. We surmise that these conditions provided favorable conditions for Trichodesmium bloom to form via mixotrophic metabolism. As a result, a fourfold increase in N2 fixation was recorded, which contributed ~70% to new primary production and spur a sharp increase in phytoplankton activity and biomass. The conclusions of this study point on a new paradigm for bloom-forming T. erythraeum which is tightly linked to anthropogenic sources and prompt microbial productivity in oligotrophic marine environments such as the SEMS.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04622-8
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