B54B-02
Turbid Bottom Waters and Ammonium-Rich Freshwaters as Nitrification Hotspots in a Large Urban Estuary (San Francisco Bay, CA)

Friday, 18 December 2015: 16:15
2004 (Moscone West)
Julian Damashek, Karen L Casciotti and Christopher Francis, Stanford University, Earth System Science, Stanford, CA, United States
Abstract:
Nitrification is the link between reduced and oxidized forms of inorganic nitrogen, and is therefore a crucial step in the estuarine nitrogen cycle. Ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms catalyze the rate-limiting step of ammonia oxidation to nitrite and thus play key roles in the biogeochemical cycling nutrient-rich estuaries. Yet, few studies have measured nitrification rates in tandem with ammonia oxidizer functional gene (amoA) expression, abundance, and diversity in estuary waters. Here, we present a multi-year data set on the microbial ecology and biogeochemistry of nitrification in the San Francisco Bay-Delta, the largest estuary on the North American west coast, collected throughout all regions of the estuary from 2012 to 2014. Data on microbial community distributions use functional gene-based PCR assays to assess the diversity, abundance, and mRNA expression of ammonia oxidizers, while stable isotope tracer experiments were used to measure nitrification rates. Ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) typically outnumbered ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) throughout the sampled gradient, though the relative abundance of AOB was often greater in brackish regions. mRNA expression of amoA appeared to largely track DNA abundance, but suggested only a fraction of the ammonia-oxidizing community was typically active. AOA were always numerically dominant in the Sacramento River, where average nitrification rates were highest, suggesting the AOA communities in this river are responsible for a relatively constant nitrification hotspot. Additionally, depth profiles of nitrification rates suggested high biogeochemical activity near the sediment-water interface in samples with abnormally high turbidity, indicating similar but transient nitrification hotspots in bottom waters containing resuspended sediments. This work increases our knowledge of the ecology and dynamics of ammonia oxidizers in the San Francisco Bay-Delta, with time series data allowing for the putative identification of regions of persistent or transiently high nitrogen cycling rates.