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It is well recognized that river-floodplain systems contribute significantly to riverine ecosystem metabolism, and that bacteria are key players in the aquatic organic carbon cycle, but surprisingly few studies have linked bacterial community composition (BCC), function and carbon quality in these hydrologically highly dynamic habitats. We investigated aquatic BCC and extracellular enzymatic activity (EEA) related to dissolved organic carbon quality and algae composition, including the impact of a major flood event in one of the last remaining European semi-natural floodplain-systems. We found that surface connectivity of floodplain pools homogenizes BCC and EEA, whereas low connectivity led to increased BCC and EEA heterogeneity, supported by their relationship to electrical conductivity, an excellent indicator for surface connection strength. Hydrogeochemical parameters best explained variation of both BCC and EEA, while the algal community and chromophoric DOM properties explained only minor fractions of BCC variation. We conclude that intermittent surface connectivity and especially permanent isolation of floodplain pools from the main river channel may severely alter BCC and EEA, with potential consequences for nutrient cycling, ecological services and greenhouse gas emissions. Disentangling microbial structure-function coupling is therefore crucial, if we are to understand and predict the consequences of human alterations on these dynamic systems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00027-020-0700-x | DOI Listing |
Blood
August 2024
AbbVie Bay Area, South San Francisco, CA.
Aquat Sci
February 2020
1Department of Limnology and Oceanography, University of Vienna, Althanstrasse 14, 1090 Wien, Austria.
It is well recognized that river-floodplain systems contribute significantly to riverine ecosystem metabolism, and that bacteria are key players in the aquatic organic carbon cycle, but surprisingly few studies have linked bacterial community composition (BCC), function and carbon quality in these hydrologically highly dynamic habitats. We investigated aquatic BCC and extracellular enzymatic activity (EEA) related to dissolved organic carbon quality and algae composition, including the impact of a major flood event in one of the last remaining European semi-natural floodplain-systems. We found that surface connectivity of floodplain pools homogenizes BCC and EEA, whereas low connectivity led to increased BCC and EEA heterogeneity, supported by their relationship to electrical conductivity, an excellent indicator for surface connection strength.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStroke
August 2014
From the Stroke Program (L.E.S., J.F.B., L.B.M., W.J.M., E.E.A., L.D.L.) and Departments of Neurology (L.E.S., J.F.B., L.B.M., E.E.A., K.A.K., B.C.C.), Epidemiology (L.B.M., L.D.L.), and Emergency Medicine (L.B.M., W.J.M.), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Background And Purpose: Poststroke rehabilitation is associated with improved outcomes. Medicaid coverage of inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF) admissions varies by state. We explored the role of state Medicaid IRF coverage on IRF utilization among patients with stroke.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFEMS Microbiol Ecol
August 2014
School of Oceanography, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Microbial enzymatic hydrolysis of marine-derived particulate organic carbon (POC) can be a dominant mechanism for attenuating carbon flux in cold Arctic waters during spring and summer. Whether this mechanism depends on composition of associated microbial communities and extends into other seasons is not known. Bacterial community composition (BCC) and extracellular enzyme activity (EEA, for leucine aminopeptidases, glucosidases and chitobiases) were measured on small suspended particles and potentially sinking aggregates collected during fall from waters of the biologically productive North Water and river-impacted Beaufort Sea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF