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Nutrient limitation masks the dissolved organic matter composition effects on bacterial metabolism in unproductive freshwaters

Berggren, Martin LU ; Ye, Linlin LU ; Sponseller, Ryan A. ; Bergström, Ann Kristin ; Karlsson, Jan ; Verheijen, Hendricus and Hensgens, Geert LU (2023) In Limnology and Oceanography 68(9). p.2059-2069
Abstract

Aquatic microbial responses to changes in the amount and composition of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) are of fundamental ecological and biogeochemical importance. Parallel factor (PARAFAC) analysis of excitation–emission fluorescence spectra is a common tool to characterize DOC, yet its ability to predict bacterial production (BP), bacterial respiration (BR), and bacterial growth efficiency (BGE) vary widely, potentially because inorganic nutrient limitation decouples microbial processes from their dependence on DOC composition. We used 28-d bioassays with water from 19 lakes, streams, and rivers in northern Sweden to test how much the links between bacterial metabolism and fluorescence PARAFAC components depend on experimental... (More)

Aquatic microbial responses to changes in the amount and composition of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) are of fundamental ecological and biogeochemical importance. Parallel factor (PARAFAC) analysis of excitation–emission fluorescence spectra is a common tool to characterize DOC, yet its ability to predict bacterial production (BP), bacterial respiration (BR), and bacterial growth efficiency (BGE) vary widely, potentially because inorganic nutrient limitation decouples microbial processes from their dependence on DOC composition. We used 28-d bioassays with water from 19 lakes, streams, and rivers in northern Sweden to test how much the links between bacterial metabolism and fluorescence PARAFAC components depend on experimental additions of inorganic nutrients. We found a significant interaction effect between nutrient addition and fluorescence on carbon-specific BP, and weak evidence for influence on BGE by the same interaction (p = 0.1), but no corresponding interaction effect on BR. A practical implication of this interaction was that fluorescence components could explain more than twice as much of the variability in carbon-specific BP (R2 = 0.90) and BGE (R2 = 0.70) after nitrogen and phosphorus addition, compared with control incubations. Our results suggest that an increased supply of labile DOC relative to ambient phosphorus and nitrogen induces gradually larger degrees of nutrient limitation of BP, which in turn decouple BP and BGE from fluorescence signals. Thus, while fluorescence does contain precise information about the degree to which DOC can support microbial processes, this information may be hidden in field studies due to nutrient limitation of bacterial metabolism.

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author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Limnology and Oceanography
volume
68
issue
9
pages
2059 - 2069
publisher
ASLO
external identifiers
  • scopus:85165443438
ISSN
1939-5590
DOI
10.1002/lno.12406
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f233da66-a3c2-45f6-bb69-e17b798f565c
date added to LUP
2023-09-20 11:11:15
date last changed
2023-10-26 14:45:55
@article{f233da66-a3c2-45f6-bb69-e17b798f565c,
  abstract     = {{<p>Aquatic microbial responses to changes in the amount and composition of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) are of fundamental ecological and biogeochemical importance. Parallel factor (PARAFAC) analysis of excitation–emission fluorescence spectra is a common tool to characterize DOC, yet its ability to predict bacterial production (BP), bacterial respiration (BR), and bacterial growth efficiency (BGE) vary widely, potentially because inorganic nutrient limitation decouples microbial processes from their dependence on DOC composition. We used 28-d bioassays with water from 19 lakes, streams, and rivers in northern Sweden to test how much the links between bacterial metabolism and fluorescence PARAFAC components depend on experimental additions of inorganic nutrients. We found a significant interaction effect between nutrient addition and fluorescence on carbon-specific BP, and weak evidence for influence on BGE by the same interaction (p = 0.1), but no corresponding interaction effect on BR. A practical implication of this interaction was that fluorescence components could explain more than twice as much of the variability in carbon-specific BP (R<sup>2</sup> = 0.90) and BGE (R<sup>2</sup> = 0.70) after nitrogen and phosphorus addition, compared with control incubations. Our results suggest that an increased supply of labile DOC relative to ambient phosphorus and nitrogen induces gradually larger degrees of nutrient limitation of BP, which in turn decouple BP and BGE from fluorescence signals. Thus, while fluorescence does contain precise information about the degree to which DOC can support microbial processes, this information may be hidden in field studies due to nutrient limitation of bacterial metabolism.</p>}},
  author       = {{Berggren, Martin and Ye, Linlin and Sponseller, Ryan A. and Bergström, Ann Kristin and Karlsson, Jan and Verheijen, Hendricus and Hensgens, Geert}},
  issn         = {{1939-5590}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{9}},
  pages        = {{2059--2069}},
  publisher    = {{ASLO}},
  series       = {{Limnology and Oceanography}},
  title        = {{Nutrient limitation masks the dissolved organic matter composition effects on bacterial metabolism in unproductive freshwaters}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lno.12406}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/lno.12406}},
  volume       = {{68}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}