Advanced search×

Transitions in bacterial communities along the 2000 km salinity gradient of the Baltic Sea.

ISME J 5(10):1571-9 (2011) PMID 21472016 PMCID PMC3176514

Salinity is a major factor controlling the distribution of biota in aquatic systems, and most aquatic multicellular organisms are either adapted to life in saltwater or freshwater conditions. Consequently, the saltwater-freshwater mixing zones in coastal or estuarine areas are characterized by limited faunal and floral diversity. Although changes in diversity and decline in species richness in brackish waters is well documented in aquatic ecology, it is unknown to what extent this applies to bacterial communities. Here, we report a first detailed bacterial inventory from vertical profiles of 60 sampling stations distributed along the salinity gradient of the Baltic Sea, one of world's largest brackish water environments, generated using 454 pyrosequencing of partial (400 bp) 16S rRNA genes. Within the salinity gradient, bacterial community composition altered at broad and finer-scale phylogenetic levels. Analogous to faunal communities within brackish conditions, we identified a bacterial brackish water community comprising a diverse combination of freshwater and marine groups, along with populations unique to this environment. As water residence times in the Baltic Sea exceed 3 years, the observed bacterial community cannot be the result of mixing of fresh water and saltwater, but our study represents the first detailed description of an autochthonous brackish microbiome. In contrast to the decline in the diversity of multicellular organisms, reduced bacterial diversity at brackish conditions could not be established. It is possible that the rapid adaptation rate of bacteria has enabled a variety of lineages to fill what for higher organisms remains a challenging and relatively unoccupied ecological niche.

DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2011.41
Version: za2963e q8zae q8zb7 q8zc9 q8zdb q8zec q8zf0 q8zg9

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. High ratio of bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis genes to chlorophyll biosynthesis genes in bacteria of humic lakes.

    Appl Environ Microbiol 75(22):7221-8 (2009) PMID 19801478

    Our results reveal a significant diversity of phototrophic microorganisms in lakes and suggest niche partitioning of oxygenic- and aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs in these systems in response to trophic status and coupled differences in light regime....
  2. Biology of type II secretion.

    Mol Microbiol 40(2):271-83 (2001) PMID 11309111

    The type II secretion pathway or the main terminal branch of the general secretion pathway, as it has also been referred to, is widely distributed among Proteobacteria, in which it is responsible for the extracellular secretion of toxins and hydrolytic enzymes, many of which contribute to pathogenes...
  3. The gene complement for proteolysis in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and Arabidopsis thaliana chloroplasts.

    Curr Genet 41(5):291-310 (2002) PMID 12185496

    A set of 62 genes that encode the entire peptidase complement of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has been identified in the genome database of that cyanobacterium. Sequence comparisons with the Arabidopsis genome uncovered the presumably homologous chloroplast components inherited from their cyanobacteri...