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Sulfate-reducing bacteria in temporarily oxic sediments with bivalves (1991)

Abstract
Marine ecology progress series, ISSN 0171-8630, vol. 78, nr. 1, 97-102. Under seasonally fluctuating redox conditions in sediment of Kiel Bay (eastern Baltic Sea), viable counts (MPN) of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) ranged between 4 x 10 super(2) and 7 x 10 super(4) cm super(-3). These MPN appeared fairly independent of ambient redox potentials and followed peaks of phytoplankton productivity in the water column with a time lag of 2 to 3 wk. The relative proportions of SRB using acetate, lactate or succinate as their electron donors fluctuated widely. Shells of the clam Arctica islandica , which can survive anoxia, were, even in oxic sediments, colonized by epizoic SRB. Significant differences between the abundance of epizoic SRB and SRB from ambient sediment were not detected. In terms of enrichment kinetics, however, epizoic SRB, and particularly those depending on succinate as electron donor, showed quicker responses.

Publication details
Repository Baltic Marine Environment Bibliography 1970- (Finland)
Keywords oxic sediments, sulphate reduction, biogeochemical cycle, epizoites, survival, Bivalvia, Desulfovibrio, Arctica islandica, Kiel Bight, Kiel Bay, Belt Sea
Type text
Language eng