SEDIMENT BACTERIA: Who's There, What Are They Doing, and What's New?
- 1 May 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences
- Vol. 25 (1), 403-434
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.earth.25.1.403
Abstract
The prokaryotes (bacteria) comprise the bulk of the biomass and chemical activity in sediments. They are well suited to their role as sediment chemists, as they are the right size and have the required metabolic versatility to oxidize the organic carbon in a variety of different ways. The characteristic vertical nutrient (electron donor and electron acceptor) profiles seen in sediments are produced as a result of microbial activities, with each nutrient a product or reactant of one or more metabolic groups. Thus, understanding the mechanisms by which the chemical environment of a sediment is generated and stabilized requires a knowledge of resident populations, something that has been very difficult to obtain, given the techniques available to microbiologists. however, the new approaches of molecular biology, which have added insights into the phylogenetic relationships of the prokaryotes, have also provided tools whereby sedimentary populations can be examined without the need for culturing the organisms. These techniques, in concert with new methods of microscopy, isolation of new metabolic groups, and the study of new ecosystems, suggest that there is much that will be learned about the microbiology of sedimentary environments in the coming years.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dissolution and Reduction of Magnetite by BacteriaEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1995
- Effect of sample handling on estimation of bacterial diversity in marine sediments by 16S rRNA gene sequence analysisFEMS Microbiology Ecology, 1994
- IRON AND MANGANESE IN ANAEROBIC RESPIRATION: Environmental Significance, Physiology, and RegulationAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1994
- Comparison of phylogenetic relationships based on phospholipid fatty acid profiles and ribosomal RNA sequence similarities among dissimilatory sulfate-reducing bacteriaFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1994
- Model of nitrification and denitrification in marine sedimentsFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1992
- Enzymic versus nonenzymic mechanisms for iron(III) reduction in aquatic sedimentsEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1991
- Microbial Ecology and Evolution: A Ribosomal RNA ApproachAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1986
- Evolution, Ecology and Diagnosis: Unity in VarietyNature Biotechnology, 1986
- Chemical and microbiological studies of sulfide‐mediated manganese reduction1Geomicrobiology Journal, 1986
- EVOLVING RIBOSOME STRUCTURE: DOMAINS IN ARCHAEBACTERIA, EUBACTERIA, EOCYTES AND EUKARYOTESAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1985