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      A comparison of ammonia-oxidiser populations in eutrophic and oligotrophic basins of a large freshwater lake.

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          Abstract

          A combination of PCR amplification and oligonucleotide probing was used to investigate the populations of ammonia-oxidisers of the beta-Proteobacteria in the eutrophic and oligotrophic basins of Lake Windermere, a large temperate lake in the English Lake District. Numbers of ammonia-oxidisers (MPN) in the Windermere lakewater were low (< 100 cells ml(-1)) throughout the year with the exception of peaks in August, which coincided with stratification, and November in the South Basin where overturn may have introduced ammonia-oxidising bacteria into the water column. Sediment samples contained larger populations of ammonia oxidisers, usually ca. 10(4) per g. dry weight, which remained relatively constant throughout the seasonal cycle in both Basins. DNA was recovered from lakewater and sediment samples and Nitrosospira and N. europaea-eutropha lineage 16S rRNA genes amplified in a nested PCR reaction, with confirmation of identity by oligonucleotide hybridisation. Nitrosospira 16S rDNA was readily detected in all samples and therefore found to be ubiquitous. In contrast, nitrosomonad DNA of the N. europaea-eutropha lineage could only be detected in the oligotrophic North Basin. Enrichment cultures of lakewater samples only exhibited nitrification at low (0.67 mM) and medium (5 mM) ammonium concentrations, whilst sediment enrichments nitrified at all concentrations tested including high (12.5 mM) ammonium medium. These data suggest that ammonia-oxidiser populations may be physiologically distinguished between lakewater and sediment, and that species distribution in a single lake is non-uniform.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek
          Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          0003-6072
          0003-6072
          Jun 2001
          : 79
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] School of Biological Sciences, University of Liverpool, UK.
          Article
          10.1023/a:1010202211368
          11520004
          91b84f43-221c-4e13-b104-f95f6bc90b56
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