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The role of plant type and salinity in the selection for the denitrifying community structure in the rhizosphere of wetland vegetation
Bañeras, Lluís; Ruiz-Rueda, Olaya; López-Flores, Rocío; Quintana, Xavier D; Hallin, Sara.
Affiliation
  • Bañeras, Lluís; University of Girona. Institute of Aquatic Ecology. Molecular Microbial Ecology Group. Spain
  • Ruiz-Rueda, Olaya; University of Girona. Institute of Aquatic Ecology. Molecular Microbial Ecology Group. Spain
  • López-Flores, Rocío; University of Girona. Institute of Aquatic Ecology and Department of Environmental Sciences. Spain
  • Quintana, Xavier D; University of Girona. Institute of Aquatic Ecology and Department of Environmental Sciences. Spain
  • Hallin, Sara; Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. Department of Microbiology. Uppsala. Sweden
Int. microbiol ; 15(2): 89-99, jun. 2012. ilus, tab, graf
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-164540
Responsible library: ES1.1
Localization: BNCS
ABSTRACT
Coastal wetlands, as transient links from terrestrial to marine environments, are important for nitrogen removal by denitrification. Denitrification strongly depends on both the presence of emergent plants and the denitrifier communities selected by different plant species. In this study, the effects of vegetation and habitat heterogeneity on the community of denitrifying bacteria were investigated in nine coastal wetlands in two preserved areas of Spain. Sampling locations were selected to cover a range of salinity (0.81 to 31.3 mS/cm) and nitrate concentrations (0.1 to 303 μM NO3-), allowing the evaluation of environmental variables that select for denitrifier communities in the rhizosphere of Phragmites sp., Ruppia sp., and Paspalum sp. Potential nitrate reduction rates were found to be dependent on the sampling time and plant species and related to the denitrifier community structure, which was assessed by terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of the functional genes nirS, nirK and nosZ. The results showed that denitrifier community structure was also governed by plant species and salinity, with significant influences of other variables, such as sampling time and location. Ruppia sp. and Phragmites sp. selected for certain communities, whereas this was not the case for Paspalum sp. The plant species effect was strongest on nirK-type denitrifiers, whereas water carbon content was a significant factor defining the structure of the nosZ-harboring community. The differences recognized using the three functional gene markers indicated that different drivers act on denitrifying populations capable of complete denitrification, compared to the overall denitrifier community. This finding may have implications for emissions of the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (AU)
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Collection: National databases / Spain Database: IBECS Main subject: Plants / Soil Microbiology / Bacteria / Ecosystem / Denitrification / Rhizosphere Country/Region as subject: Europa Language: English Journal: Int. microbiol Year: 2012 Document type: Article Institution/Affiliation country: Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences/Sweden / University of Girona/Spain
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Collection: National databases / Spain Database: IBECS Main subject: Plants / Soil Microbiology / Bacteria / Ecosystem / Denitrification / Rhizosphere Country/Region as subject: Europa Language: English Journal: Int. microbiol Year: 2012 Document type: Article Institution/Affiliation country: Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences/Sweden / University of Girona/Spain
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