Title: Environmental Microbiology Lecture 6
1Environmental Microbiology Lecture 6
- Bacterial production and biomass
2Microbial loop
3Why do we care for bacterial production?
4Bacterial abundance in marine environments
5How to determine bacterial production?
P production µ growth rate (d-1) B biomass
P µB
- Biomass (mg C/L-1)
- measuring cell abundance and cell volume by
microscopy and flow cytometry. - Production (mg C/L-1/d-1)
- measuring metabolic activities by radiolabeled
isotope incorporation.
6How to measure biomass?
- Epifluorescence microscopy
- bacterial abundance (cells ml-1)
- Filter seawater onto nucleopore polycarbonate
filter (typically 0.2 µm). - Stain bacterial cells using nucleic acid or
protein stain (e.g. DAPI or acridine orange). - Visualize cells by epifluorescence microscopy.
- Count cells and measure cell sizes.
7How to measure biomass?
- Epifluorescence microscopy
- bacterial volume (µm3 cell-1)
- Measure the diameter of 300-400 cells per samples
for statistical precision - Calculate the cell volume using V 4/3 pr3
So, Biomass (µm3 ml-1) abundance (cell ml-1) X
volume (µm3 cell-1)
8How to measure biomass?
- Flow cytometry
- Greater sensitivity and sample sizes
- Provides cell abundance and sometimes estimated
cell sizes - Sort out live and dead cells
9Carbon conversion factor for biomass (µm3 ml-1
or cells ml-1 ? mg C ml-1)
10Vertical bacterial biomass distribution in the
ocean
11How to determine bacterial production?
P production µ growth rate (d-1) B biomass
P µB
- Biomass (mg C/L-1)
- measuring cell abundance and cell volume by
microscopy and flow cytometry. - Production (mg C/L-1/d-1)
- measuring metabolic activities by radiolabeled
isotope incorporation.
12Environmental factors controlling bacterial
production
- Resources (bottom up) inorganic and organic
substrates - Predation (top down) control for biomass
accumulation, thereby influencing growth rate
determinations - Temperature
- Sun light (radiation) photoreaction of DOM
13How to measure bacterial production?
Most direct method is to measure changes in cell
abundance and volume (biomass) over time in the
absence of predation.
Common methods (? biomass/time)
- 3H-thymidine incorporation into DNA
- 3H/14C-leucine incorporation into Protein
- 3H-adenine incorporation into DNA and RNA
14How to measure bacterial production?
15Pathways of radioisotope incorporation in
bacterial biomass
16Conversion factors for bacterial production
- Derivative approach
- CFder ?(N0/T0)
- Modified derivative approach
- CFmod µ (eB/eb)
- Cumulative approach
- CFcum dN/dTdR
17Vertical profiles of bacterial production in the
ocean
18Overall bacterial biomass production in the ocean