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Zooplankton carcasses stimulate microbial turnover of allochthonous particulate organic matter

Authors

Neubauer,  Darshan
External Organizations;

Kolmakova,  Olesya
External Organizations;

Woodhouse,  Jason
External Organizations;

Taube,  Robert
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/kama

Mangelsdorf,  Kai
3.2 Organic Geochemistry, 3.0 Geochemistry, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

Gladyshev,  Michail
External Organizations;

Premke,  Katrin
External Organizations;

Grossart,  Hans-Peter
External Organizations;

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5005142.pdf
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Citation

Neubauer, D., Kolmakova, O., Woodhouse, J., Taube, R., Mangelsdorf, K., Gladyshev, M., Premke, K., Grossart, H.-P. (2021): Zooplankton carcasses stimulate microbial turnover of allochthonous particulate organic matter. - ISME Journal, 15, 1735-1750.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-020-00883-w


Cite as: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5005142
Abstract
Carbon turnover in aquatic environments is dependent on biochemical properties of organic matter (OM) and its degradability by the surrounding microbial community. Non-additive interactive effects represent a mechanism where the degradation of biochemically persistent OM is stimulated by the provision of bioavailable OM to the degrading microbial community. Whilst this is well established in terrestrial systems, whether it occurs in aquatic ecosystems remains subject to debate. We hypothesised that OM from zooplankton carcasses can stimulate the degradation of biochemically persistent leaf material, and that this effect is influenced by the daphnia:leaf OM ratio and the complexity of the degrading microbial community. Fresh Daphnia magna carcasses and 13C-labelled maize leaves (Zea mays) were incubated at different ratios (1:1, 1:3 and 1:5) alongside either a complex microbial community (<50 µm) or solely bacteria (<0.8 µm). 13C stable-isotope measurements of CO2 analyses were combined with phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) analysis and DNA sequencing to link metabolic activities, biomass and taxonomic composition of the microbial community. Our experiments indicated a significantly higher respiration of leaf-derived C when daphnia-derived OM was most abundant (i.e. daphnia:leaf OM ratio of 1:1). This process was stronger in a complex microbial community, including eukaryotic microorganisms, than a solely bacterial community. We concluded that non-additive interactive effects were a function of increased C–N chemodiversity and microbial complexity, with the highest net respiration to be expected when chemodiversity is high and the degrading community complex. This study indicates that identifying the interactions and processes of OM degradation is one important key for a deeper understanding of aquatic and thus global carbon cycle.