The active prokaryotic communities proliferate in the ecosystems of the Antarctic Ocean, participating in biogeochemical cycles and supporting higher trophic levels. They are regulated by several environmental and ecological forcing, such as the characteristics of the water masses subjected to global warming and particulate organic matter (POM). During summer 2017, two polynyas in the Ross Sea were studied to evaluate key-microbiological parameters (the proteasic, glucosidasic, and phosphatasic activities, the microbial respiratory rates, the prokaryotic abundance and biomass) in relation to quantitative and qualitative characteristics of POM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn coastal lakes the role of microorganisms in driving nutrients regeneration at different water depths and in sediments is not yet fully understood. The dynamics of microbial (algal and bacterial) abundance and bacterial activities involved in organic matter transformation were measured, together with nutrient concentrations, through a microcosm experiment set up using the oligotrophic Faro lake as a study model over a total period of 15 days and with a four-day frequency. Water column at different depths (surface, middle and bottom) and interstitial water obtained by sediment centrifugation were used in appropriate ratios (mixed 1:1 with surface waters) to fill 21-Litre plastic aquaria in order to simulate processes occurring in natural conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive 2008/56/EC (MSFD) defines a framework for Community actions in the field of marine environmental policy in order to achieve and/or maintain the Good Environmental Status (GES) of the European seas by 2020. Microbial assemblages (from viruses to microbial-sized metazoa) provide a major contribution to global biodiversity and play a crucial role in the functioning of marine ecosystems, but are largely ignored by the MSFD. Prokaryotes are only seen as "microbial pathogens," without defining their role in GES indicators.
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