|
Small,
single-celled microbes play a significant role in
the natural fertilization of the upper ocean, according
to new research by a USC biological oceanographer.
Writing in a recent
issue of the journal Nature, Douglas G. Capone of
the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences and
colleagues report that a group of single-celled bacteria
convert gaseous nitrogen into a form useful for other
living things at a rate many times higher than shown
in earlier studies.
The team also found
that these diminutive bacteria and photosynthetic
cyanobacteria, which measure less than 10 microns
across, are more widely distributed and abundant than
scientists had thought.
The nano-sized phytoplankton
thrive in the expansive blue water zones of the tropical
and subtropical Pacific Ocean, where scarce nutrients
limit the growth of most organisms.
“We thought that the
nanoplankton were involved in fixing nitrogen, but
we were surprised to find out just how important they
are,” said Capone, holder of the Wrigley Chair in
Environmental Science and a professor of biological
sciences.
“People suspected
it, but no one has previously been able to show it
quantitatively.”
In samples taken from
the northern Pacific Ocean, the scientists used a
combination of genetic and high-sensitivity chemical
tracer methods to show that the microbes could produce
approximately 7 milligrams of “fixed” nitrogen per
square meter of ocean per day.
The addition of this
amount of fixed nitrogen to the Pacific alone would
provide a substantial boost to marine life, supplying
the key nutrient for new biological growth in the
ocean equal to about 10 percent of the total global
marine biomass.
“These unicells are
the largest single source of nitrogen entering the
water in broad areas of the ocean,” said Joe Montoya,
a biologist at the Georgia Institute of Technology
and the study’s first author.
Beyond confirming
the role of the nanoplankton in the marine nitrogen
cycle, the new finding has broader implications for
understanding the movement of carbon dioxide between
the oceans and the atmosphere.
“This is an important
finding that helps us understand the ocean’s nitrogen
cycle,” said James Yoder, director of the National
Science Foundation’s ocean sciences division, which
funded the research. “The nitrogen cycle is one of
the keys to understanding the role of ocean biology
in the global carbon cycle.”
Understanding the
complex dynamics of both cycles has gained new importance
and urgency in the face of climate change. Carbon
dioxide gas helps insulate the Earth through the greenhouse
effect, but excessive emissions of the gas from vehicles
and industry have contributed to global warming.
Balancing the Nitrogen
Budget
For many years, geochemists
modeling the movement of nitrogen through the marine
biosphere realized their budgets did not add up –
physical processes alone accounted for only about
half of the fixed nitrogen available in the ocean.
Capone was among the
first marine scientists to reveal the critical role
biological organisms play in the marine nitrogen cycle.
He is perhaps most
well known for his work on another group of nitrogen-fixing
marine bacteria – the larger, colonial cyanobacteria
Trichodesmium, which up to now, has been considered
the dominant marine nitrogen-fixer.
“Because they’re colonial,
and they live in clumps, it’s been easier to collect
and observe Trichodesmium,” said Capone, who is also
a faculty member at the USC Wrigley Institute for
Environmental Studies.
Only recently have
scientists had the tools to look as closely at the
smaller forms of photosynthetic cyanobacteria and
bacteria that comprise the nanoplankton, he said.
But it wasn’t clear
until the current study whether these tiny microbes
were fixing enough nitrogen to actually impact the
environment.
“It turns out that
the nanoplankton are taking up significant amounts
of nitrogen gas—equal to or even greater than the
amounts fixed by the larger Trichodesmium,” Capone
said.
“The low-nutrient,
blue water zones turn out to be great ecological niches
for these nitrogen fixers,” Capone said. “The nanoplankton
can quickly become dominant in the blue zones, growing
to capacity until they hit another limit” - a lack
of phosphorus or other essential mineral, for example.
On research cruises
scheduled for 2006 and 2007, Capone and his colleagues
plan to continue investigations in the Pacific, as
well as in the north Atlantic and the south Pacific.
In addition to collecting more detailed nitrogen fixation
rate measurements, the researchers will conduct experiments
to determine how levels of phosphorus, iron and other
environmental factors affect the abundance, distribution
and activity of the nanoplankton.
“We’re interested
in figuring out who fixes gaseous nitrogen and where
it goes in the marine biosphere,” said Capone, who
thinks that there are probably many more nitrogen-fixing
marine organisms awaiting discovery.
“The closer we look at the oceans,” he said, “the
more important the tiniest organisms appear to be.”
Article written by
Eva Emerson
USC News Service
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA 90089-779
Phone: (213) 740-2215
Fax: (213) 740-7600
uscnews@usc.edu
|