Published 2004
| Version v1
Publication
Sedimentary organic matter and bacterial community in microtidal mixed beaches of the Ligurian Sea (NW Mediterranean)
Description
The quantity and quality of organic matter, and bacterial density and frequency of dividing cells were investigated in
six microtidal mixed beaches of the Ligurian Sea (NW Mediterranean) to evaluate their main trophodynamic
features. Concentrations of biopolymeric carbon (average 88.5+89.0 mgC/g) and the protein:carbohydrate ratio
(on average lower than 1) were very low and classified these beaches as highly oligotrophic. The study of
biochemical composition highlighted the nature of organic matter as being mainly refractory; furthermore, the
quantitative differences observed along the across-beach gradient together with the unchanged pattern in
qualitative features suggest that the organic matter in Ligurian beaches is prevalently of marine origin. This
implies a negligible contribution of allochtonous and anthropogenic terrestrial input or in situ autochthonous
production. Bacterial density displayed values ranging from 0.1–9.0 cell 108/g DW in the top 2 cm layer and
showed a significant correlation with the quantity of organic matter. In addition, the frequency of dividing cells
showed a positive correlation with the protein:carbohydrate ratio, suggesting that the biochemical composition of
organic matter also has an influence on the active bacterial fraction. Because of the exposed nature, a strong
coupling was found between the beach and the marine systems, and this seems to be of fundamental importance
in terms of material and energy supply for the beach ecosystem. A shortage within this linkage was observed in
summer owing to the strong environmental constrains leading to a sort of "beach desertification" and to a marked
oligotrophy. Summer also has an effect of smoothing for spatial variability occurring within the biochemical and
microbiological variables among the different beaches. The linkage observed between the sea and the land is the
main factor controlling the origin and nature of sediment organic matter in these beaches also regulating
bacterial abundances and the frequency of dividing cells.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/248031
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/248031
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE