High bacterial carbon demand and low growth efficiency at a tropical hypereutrophic estuary: importance of dissolved organic matter remineralization

Authors

  • Mariana Guenther Universidade de Pernambuco; Instituto de Ciências Biológicas
  • Eliane Gonzalez-Rodriguez Instituto de Estudos do Mar Almirante Paulo Moreira
  • Manuel Flores-Montes Universidade Federal de Pernambuco; Departamento de Oceanografia
  • Moacyr Araújo Universidade Federal de Pernambuco; Departamento de Oceanografia
  • Sigrid Neumann-Leitão Universidade Federal de Pernambuco; Departamento de Oceanografia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/s1679-87592017137406503

Keywords:

Bacterioplankton, Bacterial production, Bacterial respiration, Microbial loop, BCD, BGE

Abstract

Simultaneous measurements of bacterioplankton production (BP) and respiration (BR) are imperative to understand the magnitude of carbon cycle in the lower trophic levels of the aquatic systems, but are still scarce in the tropics. The present study was performed in a highly productive estuary (Recife harbor, 08°03'S; 34°52'W, NE Brazil) where bacterial carbon demand (BCD=BP+BR) and growth efficiency (BGE=BP/BCD) were evaluated in order to estimate the major role of bacterioplankton: source or sink of organic carbon. In spite of the high BP rates (0.03-0.4 µMC h-1), the extremely high BR rates (0.5-4.1 µMC h-1) led to low BGE (0.02-0.29), possibly due to the high temperatures (>;25ºC) and strong inorganic nitrogen limitation (N:P ratios) The high BCD and low BGE indicate the major role of bacterioplankton as dissolved organic matter remineralizers, fueling the primary productivity of the system. These findings contradict what could be expected from studies in highly productive temperate estuaries (where BGE is usually >; 0.30) and highlight the importance of increasing in situ BP and BR estimates in tropical estuarine systems in order to better understand the role of these systems in global carbon cycling.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2017-09-01

Issue

Section

Original Article

How to Cite

High bacterial carbon demand and low growth efficiency at a tropical hypereutrophic estuary: importance of dissolved organic matter remineralization. (2017). Brazilian Journal of Oceanography, 65(3), 382-391. https://doi.org/10.1590/s1679-87592017137406503