Biological studies in the vicinity of a shallow-sea tidal mixing front II. The distribution of bacteria

The work described in this paper was carried out in the summers of 1980 and 1981 in the western Irish sea. The purpose was to ascertain the effects of the annual thermal stratification which occurs in the region on the distribution of bacteria. The sampling regime involved a line of ten stations on a transect normal to a tidal mixing front, sampled at four depths in 1980 and six depths in 1981. Estimation of bacterial numbers was carried out by using a modified acridine orange epifluorescent staining method. The data was statistically analysed by using a nested analysis of variance technique which showed a stable and relatively uniform winter—early spring distribution with low overall counts which became more patchy as the spring progressed and the counts increased. In late summer the distribution became more uniform again within the mixed and stratified water masses but with significantly higher counts in the stratified water.

A study has been made of the distribution and activities of bacteria and zooplankton as they varied seasonally in 1980 and 1981 in the vicinity of a shallow-sea tidal mixing front in the western Irish Sea (approximate position 53° 20' N, 5° 45' W to 53° 50' N, 5° 0' W ). This paper presents the physical and chemical background to these studies as shown by the variations in temperature and salinity and concentrations of chlorophyll a , phaeopigments, cellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP), nitrate, nitrite and ammonium nitrogen, in sections normal to the front. Observations at drogue stations were made to establish the extent of diurnal variations in these properties but these appeared to be small relative to other variations. As the front developed, higher chlorophyll a concentrations appeared in the surface stratified water, in contrast to the bottom stratified water and mixed water, with highest concentrations at the surface at the stratified side of the front and in subsurface patches in the vicinity of the pycnocline. As the phytoplankton populations increased nitrate became depleted in the surface stratified water but nitrite and ammonium nitrogen concentrations remained at about the same levels. Cellular ATP concentration did not appear to be a useful measure of total biomass but indicated high biological activity in the surface stratified water.


Three, possibly four, ecosystems forming seasonally are associated with the tidal mixing front in the western Irish Sea. They are distinguished not only by the presence or absence of particular species but by their relative intensities of heterotrophic activity and degree of organization as shown in the number of statistically significant correlations between the variables pertaining to them. The mam body of surface stratified water, at first dominated by an expanding population of phototrophs, attains during the summer a state of dynamic equilibrium in which the standing stock of phytoplankton remains at about the same level, its primary productivity being balanced by high levels of heterotrophic activity and cycling of nitrogen. The bottom stratified water, besides having minimal photosynthetic activity, shows low zooplankton stocks, low heterotrophic activity and the lowest level of organization. Mixed water has lower standing stocks, less heterotrophic activity, lower rates of nitrogen cycling, and is a less highly organized system than the surface stratified water. The stratified water in a band about 10 km wide adjacent to the front does not show conspicuously higher total standing stocks of phytoplank ton, bacteria and zooplankton in the water column down to the pycnocline, than the rest of the stratified water. Animals migrating into it do not provide an appreciable extra source of nutrients for the phytoplankton. It does, however, show much higher heterotrophic activity and rates of nitrogen cycling than the rest of the stratified water. This is tentatively attributed to increased photosynthesis, consequent on the redistribution of phytoplankton by frontal eddies, being taken up in increased heterotrophic activity rather than in growth of the phytoplankton itself. A similar situation appears to exist at the plume front in Liverpool Bay but here there is the additional factor of collection at the front of particulate organic matter derived from river inflow.


On six cruises in 1980 the vertical and horizontal distributions of urea concentration and uptake rates were determined in the vicinity of a shallow-sea tidal mixing front in the western Irish Sea. Urea concentrations, while patchy, were similar throughout the year and showed no significant patterns of distribution and no relation to stratification of the water column. Urea uptake rates, on the other land, showed a consistent and strong relationship to stratification, both vertically and horizontally, fastest rates being found in the less dense water on the stratified side of the front and above the pycnocline. Large differences between waters above and below the pycnocline were found during months of strong stratification. Similar differences occurred between the stratified and mixed surface waters on each side of the front. From relatively low urea uptake rates in March, when stratification was weak, extremely high rates were observed in June and thereafter decreased attaining another minimum at the end of September when stratification was weakening. Urea uptake indices (uptake per unit of chlorophyll a ) were also highest in the surface stratified waters and followed a similar vertical, horizontal and seasonal distribution pattern as that of urea uptake rates. The seemingly unchanging urea concentrations throughout the year and its extremely fast uptake by micro-organisms indicate a rapid flux of this nitrogenous com pound in the surface of the stratified waters. The possible routes of urea regeneration are discussed. Budget calculation indicate that urea was an important source of nitrogen for phytoplankton in the surface stratified waters when oxidized forms of nitrogen such as nitrate were depleted and that the rapid flux of reduced nitrogen in the form of urea may be a major factor in sustaining high productivity associated with the frontal system.


Heterotrophic incorporation and respiration of 14C-labelled glucose (tracer approach) and natural concentrations of glucose were measured, as part of a multidisciplinary research projection five cruises in the western Irish Sea from M arch to September 1980. The investigations were carried out along a transect across a shallow-sea tidal mixing front and its adjacent stratified and vertically mixed water masses. The spatial distribution pattern in relation to hydrographical conditions, diurna changes observed at drogue stations, and seasonal developments are described. High turnover rates of [14C]glucose were strongly associated with stratification, both spatially as well as seasonally, starting with low rates early in spring at the beginning of stratification, increasing to maxim um rates in July after the phytoplankton bloom, and subsequent y declining in autumn when stratification weakened. Turnover rates were consistently and significantly higher in the waters above the pycnocline than below it or in the vertically mixed water masses to the east of the front. No distinct diurnal rhythm s were recognized. The mixed water column, in particular, was totally uniform in heterotrophic uptake of glucose whereas the surface of the stratified water showed greater variability. A fairly constant proportion of, on average, 32 % of the glucose carbon was respired. Natural glucose concentration ranged from less than 30 to 322 nM, mean 116 nM. No particular pattern in its distribution could be detected in the different water masses despite considerable changes in use of glucose. Turnover rates of glucose were unrelated to numbers of bacterial cells or their biomass. Glucose uptake per bacterial cell (uptake index) was estimated and showed pronounced seasonal increase during sum m er in the surface stratified water mass, especially, in the vicinity of the front. The importance of the surface waters of the stratified water body and the frontal zone in respect to carbon flux and potential bacterial biomass production is discussed.


1998 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Durazo ◽  
N.M. Harrison ◽  
A.E. Hill

There has been no change in the overall species composition of the western Irish Sea zooplankton during the last 80 years. Although Pseudocalanus elongatus and Acartia clausi were always the most abundant species encountered in the survey area, Calanus finmarchicus has been the main contributor to the total zooplankton biomass. The marked decline in numbers of this copepod in 1981 was almost totally responsible for the large decrease in zooplankton biomass observed during that year. The highest zooplankton standing stocks were found to occur above the thermocline in the stratified region between April and June. In the mixed isothermal region zooplankton standing stocks were much lower with a maximum at least one month later than on the stratified side of the front. The frontal region was found to have little influence on the distribution of the total zooplankton. On the isolated occasions when higher zooplankton concentrations were observed within the frontal region they were always found to be associated with localized high densities of surface chlorophyll and due to increased copepod production rather than mechanical aggregation.


2005 ◽  
Vol 62 (6) ◽  
pp. 1021-1036 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Lee ◽  
R.D.M. Nash ◽  
B.S. Danilowicz

Abstract This study examines the spatio-temporal dynamics of fish larvae and their prey at a tidal-mixing front in the central Irish Sea. The distribution of ichthyoplankton and zooplankton was analysed in relation to environmental variables (depth, surface temperature, surface salinity, and water column stratification) using Redundancy Analysis (RDA). Significant interannual variability in the formation and position of the tidal-mixing front coincided with large differences in the species abundances of both ichthyoplankton and zooplankton. During the summer, ichthyoplankton and zooplankton communities were structured by a combination of depth and hydrography, and the variability in species composition was directly related to the average value of the stratification parameter. Several ichthyoplankton species were consistently associated with frontal waters, while fewer species were concentrated in mixed water masses throughout the sampling period. The distribution of individual zooplankton species was also examined, and water mass affinities were shown to vary with developmental stage.


Author(s):  
Majid Baserisalehi ◽  
Samira Zarezadeh ◽  
Majid Baserisalehi ◽  
Saeed Shoa

Stenotrophomonas maltophilia is an emerging pathogenic non-fermentative Gram-negative Bacillus species. It has caused many nosocomial infections and can be isolated from various hospital wards and healthcare facilities. Research has shown that most of its strains are inherently resistant to many antibiotics and have multidrug resistance. This research intended to determine its occurrence frequency at some Hospitals in shiraz, Iran. The present study was conducted in six months (from early spring to late summer 2019). Clinical samples (Blood, Urine and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)) collected from 120 patients afflicted with various infections. The samples were transferred to the Laboratory and subjected to microbiological analysis. Identification of the isolates was carried out by phenotypic methods and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia isolates verified using molecular methods. In total, various bacteria were isolated from 84 clinical samples. The isolates were Escherichia coli, Enterobacter aerogenes, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Stenotrophomonas maltophilia was isolated from 17 (20.2%) positive samples and most of them were isolated from blood samples. Our finding indicated that Stenotrophomonas maltophilia isolated more from blood samples follow by CSF sample. In addition, our finding illustrated that Stenotrophomonas maltophilia can be considered as the common nosocomial agent at hospitals in Shiraz, Iran.


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