Swept Away: Resuspension of Bacterial Mats Regulates Benthic-Pelagic Exchange of Sulfur
- 12 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 236 (4807) , 1472-1474
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.236.4807.1472
Abstract
Filaments and extracellular material from colorless sulfur bacteria (Beggiatoa spp.) form extensive white sulfur mats on surface sediments of coastal, oceanic, and even deep-sea environments. These chemoautotrophic bacteria oxidize soluble reduced sulfur compounds and deposit elemental sulfur, enriching the sulfur content of surface sediment fivefold over that of deeper sediments. Laboratory flume experiments with Beggiatoa mats from an intertidal sandflat (Nova Scotia) demonstrated that even slight erosion of sediment causes a flux of 160 millimoles of sulfur per square meter per hour, two orders of magnitude greater than the flux produced by sulfur transformations involving either sulfate reduction or sulfide oxidation by benthic bacteria. These experiments indicate that resuspension of sulfur bacterial mats by waves and currents is a rapid mechanism by which sediment sulfur is recycled to the water column. Benthic communities thus lose an important storage intermediate for reduced sulfur as well as a high-quality bacterial food source for benthic grazers.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Seasonal dynamics of elemental sulfur in two coastal sedimentsPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- The interaction between benthic diatom films and sediment transportEstuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 1986
- Flumes for benthic ecologists: theory, construction and practiceMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1986
- Water-column dark C02 fixation and bacterial-mat growth in intermittently anoxic Saanich Inlet, British ColumbiaMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1986
- Subtidal Gastropods Consume Sulfur-Oxidizing Bacteria: Evidence from Coastal Hydrothermal VentsScience, 1984
- BEGGIATOA, THIOTHRIX, AND THIOPLOCAAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1983
- Role of bacterial mats in oxygen-deficient marine basins and coastal upwelling regimes: Preliminary reportGeology, 1983
- Annual in situ carbon dioxide and oxygen flux across a subtidal marine sedimentEstuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 1981
- A comparison of oxygen, nitrate, and sulfate respiration in coastal marine sedimentsMicrobial Ecology, 1979
- The ecology of marine microbenthos IV. Structure and function of the benthic ecosystem, its chemical and physical factors and the microfauna commuities with special reference to the ciliated protozoaOphelia, 1969