Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Linking Geology and Microbiology: Inactive Pockmarks Affect Sediment Microbial Community Structure

  • Thomas H. A. Haverkamp ,

    thhaverk@gmail.com

    Affiliation Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

  • Øyvind Hammer,

    Affiliation Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

  • Kjetill S. Jakobsen

    Affiliations Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway, Microbial Evolution Research Group, Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

Abstract

Pockmarks are geological features that are found on the bottom of lakes and oceans all over the globe. Some are active, seeping oil or methane, while others are inactive. Active pockmarks are well studied since they harbor specialized microbial communities that proliferate on the seeping compounds. Such communities are not found in inactive pockmarks. Interestingly, inactive pockmarks are known to have different macrofaunal communities compared to the surrounding sediments. It is undetermined what the microbial composition of inactive pockmarks is and if it shows a similar pattern as the macrofauna. The Norwegian Oslofjord contains many inactive pockmarks and they are well suited to study the influence of these geological features on the microbial community in the sediment. Here we present a detailed analysis of the microbial communities found in three inactive pockmarks and two control samples at two core depth intervals. The communities were analyzed using high-throughput amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA V3 region. Microbial communities of surface pockmark sediments were indistinguishable from communities found in the surrounding seabed. In contrast, pockmark communities at 40 cm sediment depth had a significantly different community structure from normal sediments at the same depth. Statistical analysis of chemical variables indicated significant differences in the concentrations of total carbon and non-particulate organic carbon between 40 cm pockmarks and reference sample sediments. We discuss these results in comparison with the taxonomic classification of the OTUs identified in our samples. Our results indicate that microbial communities at the sediment surface are affected by the water column, while the deeper (40 cm) sediment communities are affected by local conditions within the sediment.

Introduction

Pockmarks are craterlike structures found on the seabed [1]. They can be found in all oceans and even in lakes and can be very numerous in certain areas [2], [3]. They are often associated with subsurface oil and gas fields which makes them interesting geological features for the oil/gas-industry [4]. Pockmarks are often formed due to active processes in the subsurface such as the emission of gas and/or fluids to the surface. The exact formation of pockmarks is still under debate, but recent studies indicate that pockmark craters are formed rapidly, when pressurized subsurface gas or pore-water is suddenly released through the seafloor sediments [5], [6]. Following the sudden “birth” of pockmarks, many of these structures continue to emit gas or fluid from the subsurface at a slower pace until they become dormant after a relatively short active period [2], [3], [6]. During the expulsion of fluids and gas fine grained sediments are resuspended in the water column and deposited outside the pockmarks leaving coarser grain sized material inside the pockmark [6]. Dormant or inactive pockmarks can be awakened by new pulses of gas or fluid, indicated by the vertical stacking in the subsurface [3]. Areas with many pockmarks are often stable in the number of pockmarks since subsurface gas or fluid flow usually tends to follow the existing venting channels instead of creating novel ones [5]. Finally, surveys of the seabed indicate that inactive pockmarks outnumber the active pockmarks [2], [7].

Although inactive pockmarks may seem unexciting compared to active pockmarks, there are a number of studies describing the geological characteristics of these structures at different geographical locations [7][11]. For instance, since inactive pockmarks have no active outflow of gas and fluids it is expected that they would fill up over time due to sedimentation of particles. However, studies of inactive pockmarks in the Oslofjord and the Belfast Bay contradict such expectations. This suggests that some kind of activity keeps them open, or that they have been active up to recently [7], [9], [10]. A possible explanation is that pockmarks influence the hydrodynamics above the seabed. Pockmarks can have an effect on the local hydrodynamic conditions by deflecting the water current [12], [13]. The resulting upwelling of seawater could reduce the sedimentation rates of fine-grained particles inside the pockmarks, which would prevent the pockmarks from filling up. In a recent study in the Oslofjord a single inactive pockmark was intensively investigated to understand the reduced sedimentation rates within such structures [14]. It was shown that sediment traps placed closely above the seafloor had higher sedimentation rates inside the pockmark than outside the pockmark. Nonetheless, the pockmark sediments contained relatively larger abundances of the coarser particles compared to the surrounding sediments. This suggested that a large fraction of the fine-grained particles are resuspended inside pockmarks due to turbulence and possible biological activity. The resuspended particles could then be transported out of the pockmarks by water currents [14]. In this way, inactive pockmarks can be maintained via physically or biologically induced water movements.

Pockmarks are not only geologically interesting structures but are of biological significance as well. For instance active pockmarks, so called because of detectable gas and fluid fluxes, harbor specialized microbial communities metabolizing compounds such as methane or other hydrocarbons [15][17]. These microbial communities provide energy and nutrients to sustain the presence of specialized macroorganisms living in symbiotic interactions with the microbes. Due to the exotic nature of these chemoautotrophic communities they have been intensively studied in recent years [18].

In contrast to active pockmarks their inactive counterparts have been studied to a limited extent in a microbiological perspective and then only in relation to the presence of biogenic methane or remains of hydrocarbon seepage [19][21]. Additionally, to the best of our knowledge we are not aware of studies comparing microbial communities of inactive pockmarks and the surrounding sediments that are not influenced by hydrocarbons. For macrofauna on the other hand, there is literature available describing communities inside and outside pockmarks. In brief, bioturbating macrofaunal species in sediment communities were found to be significantly different inside and outside of pockmarks at several locations in the Oslofjord suggesting that pockmarks influence the distribution of macrofaunal species [11]. Bioturbators can both redistribute particles and/or ventilate the sediments by moving water in or out of the burrows, which could affect both redox gradients and availability of microbial resources (e.g. carbon, nitrogen) [22]. Therefore changes in bioturbating species composition could have an effect on the sediment biogeochemistry, which in turn can influence the microbial community composition inside and outside pockmarks [22][29].

Other factors influencing the biogeochemistry of benthic sediments are sinking phytoplankton blooms, marine snow and zooplankton fecal pellets and terrestrial run off that add organic matter to the sediments [30], [31]. Organic matter, which is part of total organic carbon (TOC), is made up of simple and complex compounds such as sugars, proteins, lipids, humic acids, etc., and contributes to the total carbon (TC) content of the sediments. In addition, sediment TC also contains inorganic carbon (IC) compounds such as carbonate, bicarbonate and dissolved carbon dioxide. The microbial sediment community decomposes the organic matter and releases dissolved organic carbon (DOC), which can be used by other members of the microbial community. As pelagic organic matter is deposited on the seabed, it can induce rapid changes within the sediments that can affect the diversity of the benthic microbial communities [32], [33]. Bienhold et al. [33] showed that an increase of organic matter (phytodetritus) deposition onto sediments increased the bacterial operational taxonomic unit (OTU) richness in oligothrophic conditions. However, this effect was not seen under mesotrophic conditions suggesting that other factors e.g. oxygen availability, become limiting.

Besides organic matter an additional carbon source is included in TOC which is composed of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) derived from natural or anthropogenic sources [34], [35]. Due to their hydrophobic nature most PAHs will absorb to sediment particles from the water column where they will be available for biodegradation [34], [36]. PAHs vary in their structure and molecular weight where an increase in molecular weight enhances the degradation and environmental persistence times of these compounds [35], [36]. This means that not only the PAH sediment concentrations decrease with depth due to biodegradation, but that the ratios between different PAHs also change with time. In addition, several studies have used the PAH ratios to determine historic anthropogenic PAH input into marine and freshwater sediments [37][39]. The rate at which biodegradation of PAHs occurs depends on many factors including temperature, pH, oxygen availability, the microbial community composition, etc., [35]. The key players in the biodegradation of PAH are bacteria and lignolytic fungi, which mineralize it into inorganic minerals and inorganic carbon released as DOC.

Bacteria are not only important for the carbon cycling in the sediment, but are also major players in the nitrogen cycle [40]. The nitrogen found in sediments can be composed of nitrate, nitrite, ammonia and organic nitrogen sources such as amino acids. Bioavailable nitrogen can come from degradation of organic matter or via nitrogen fixation [31]. In the presence of oxygen ammonium is used in nitrification giving nitrate while in anoxic sediments ammonium is converted to N2 via the anammox pathway [41]. Nitrate is metabolized in anoxic sediments via denitrification or dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium. Organic matter content of marine sediments determines the denitrification rates since nitrate is an electron acceptor for the oxidation of organic matter, which is considered an important process in coastal marine sediments [42], [43].

Considering that inactive pockmarks in coastal zones are influenced in the same way as normal sediments then the main driver for the microbial sediment community diversity is the organic loading from the water column through sedimentation. This implies that pockmark sediment communities would be dominated by Delta- and Gammaproteobacteria as is the case for normal marine sediments [44]. However, a few studies suggest that sedimentation rates within pockmarks could be different from outside and it is not clear how this affects both the deposition of (in-) organic matter and the microbial community composition inside and outside of pockmarks [12][14], [45], [46].

Since studies of microbial communities from hydrocarbon negative inactive pockmarks are lacking, we have compared these communities with surrounding sediments in the Oslofjord using amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA. The Oslofjord pockmarks are relatively recently formed and do not seem to be influenced by hydrocarbons [10]. Analysis of two cores from the Oslofjord indicated that these pockmarks originate from the start of the Holocene and that they are influenced by seepage of fresh groundwater, but that the seepage is sporadic [9]. It is therefore not likely that seepage counters sedimentation rates between seepage events. Nonetheless, if seepage occurs it could affect ion concentrations of Na+, Cl and SO42+ within the sediments [47]. In line with this, freshwater seepage could in principle have an effect on the microbial communities via changes in the redox potential of the sediments with the deeper lying communities being more easily affected [47], [48]. Furthermore, it is well known that the redox potential in sediments changes with depth and in recent years it was shown that this affects the cell abundances as well as the microbial community composition [31], [49][52].

Here we have tested the hypothesis that the inactive Oslofjord pockmarks have a different microbial community than the surrounding sediments caused by processes within the pockmark structures. Since it is unclear which processes exactly determine the divergence of the microbial communities within pockmark sediments from the surrounding sediments, it was needed to obtain a detailed description of the chemistry and community composition. This would allow us to identify major factors causing a community difference between inactive pockmarks and their surrounding sediments.

Materials and Methods

Ethics Statement

No specific permits were required for the described study. The study location is not privately owned or protected in any way and the sediment sampling did not involve endangered or protected species.

Sample Collection

Sampling of Oslofjord sediments was done on the 28th of October 2011, using the research vessel Trygve Braarud. Among the more than 500 Oslofjord pockmarks we chose three pockmarks (PM) that are located in the inner Oslofjord at a depth of about 70 meters and two closely related reference sites (RD and RE) for sampling (59° 44′ N, 10° 31′ E; Table 1, Figure 1). The maximum distance between sampling sites was 180 m (PM10 vs. PM12) (Table 1, Table S1 in File S1). Using a multicorer, we obtained three sediment cores from every sample site that were used for DNA extraction and chemical analysis. The cores (diameter × length: 10×60 cm) were transported to the laboratory and the cores were pushed out and divided into two halves along the vertical axis using a platinum wire. Visual observations of the sediment coloration were noted (Table S2 in File S1). One half of the core was used for extracting porewater, while the other half was used for collecting material for DNA extraction and PAH measurements. We sampled the cores at the horizons of 0–4 and 40 cm depth for three reasons. First, sediments are known to have a highly structured separation of different microbial communities along the depth axis [53], [54]. Second, the Oslofjord pockmarks show indications of sporadic freshwater seepage below 30 cm depth [9].Third, the pockmark communities in the Oslofjord experience both higher sedimentation and resuspension rates which could affect the microbial community composition within the pockmark sediments [13], [14]. All extractions were done using three cores on the 0–4 cm and 40 cm sediment horizons, giving a total of 30 samples. Sediment samples for DNA extraction were frozen at −20°C. Porewater was extracted using a Rhizon CSS-F 5 cm sampler (Rhizosphere Research Products, The Netherlands). The extracted porewater was divided into two batches and immediately frozen after extraction and stored at −20°C until measurement. For PAH measurements, >20 gram of sediment was collected from one core per location and stored in dark brown 100 ml glass bottles, frozen at −20°C.

thumbnail
Figure 1. Bathymetric map of the sampling area in the Oslofjord.

The red crosses indicate the sampling sites and the sampling site designation is given. The map was generated with the www.mareano.no website.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.g001

Chemical Analysis

One batch of sediment porewater was used to measure concentrations of the cations: Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+ and anions: F,Cl, SO42−, Br. The other batch was used for total nitrogen (TN), non-purgable organic carbon (NPOC) and IC (Table S3 in File S1). For the ions measurements, 1 ml of porewater was diluted 100x and 1000x. The cations were measured on an Ion Chromatography System (ICS-1000) and the anions on an Ion Chromatography System (ICS-2000) with the appropriate standards (Thermo Scientific, CA, USA).

Total Nitrogen, NPOC and IC concentrations were measured on a Thermo Finnigan Flash 1112 element analyzer (Interscience, The Netherlands). PAHs, TC and TOC measures were performed by Geolab Nor (Norway) on dried and ground sediments. Detailed descriptions of the sample sites, cores and chemistry data can be obtained from the website: http://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.820086 (File S1).

DNA Extraction and Clean-up

Sediment samples were thawed at 4°C and four replicate samples were taken for each core and each depth. DNA extraction was done using the FastDNA spin kit for soil (MP biomedicals, OH, USA) following the manufacturer’s instructions with minor changes. In brief, approximately 0.5 g of sediment was weighed and transferred to a bead-beating tube. Subsequently, NaPO4 buffer and MT buffer were added to the tube, and the tube was frozen at −20°C for at least 30 minutes. The samples were thawed and thereafter homogenized using the Fastprep instrument for 2 times 20 seconds at speed 6. Homogenized samples were centrifuged at 14.000×g in an Eppendorf centrifuge 5424R (Eppendorf AG, Hamburg, Germany) and the normal protocol was followed until elution. Elution was done by adding 100 µl of DNase-free water and samples were incubated at 55°C for 3 minutes. After incubation, samples were centrifuged at 14.000×g for one minute. The DNA extractions were stored at 4°C. DNA extractions of each replicate were checked by separating the products by electrophoresis in a 1% agarose gel (Seakem LE agarose, Lonza group ltd, Basel, Switzerland). The four replicates for each of the 30 samples were pooled. DNA concentrations were measured using a Nanodrop ND-1000 (Nanodrop Technologies, Wilmington, DE, USA), which indicated the presence of humic acids due to a large absorption peak between 220 and 230 nm.

To remove humic acids and other PCR inhibitors from the DNA extractions we used the Mobio Powerclean cleanup kit (Mobio Laboratories, Carlsbad, CA, USA) following the manufacturer’s instructions. Cleaned DNA preparations were checked using a 1% agarose gel. DNA concentration was measured using Nanodrop ND-1000.

PCR Amplification, Normalization and Amplicon Sequencing

Amplification of the V3 region of the 16S rRNA was done using the primers 338F and 533R with the MID-tags and adaptors already attached [55] (File S2). For each sample triplicate 25 µl PCR reactions were set up with the following concentrations per reaction: 1×HF PCR Buffer (Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA), 10 ng DNA, 5 µM of each primer, 2 mM of each dTNP, and 0.5 units of Phusion Hot Start II DNA Polymerase (Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA). The PCR was run on a Biometra T1 Thermocycler with the following program: 60 s 98°C hotstart, followed by 20 cycles of 10 s at 98°C, 30 s at 55°C and 15 s at 72°C. The program finished with a 10 minutes elongation step at 72°C. The PCR reactions were accompanied by a positive (Polaromonas naphthalenivorans DSM15660) and a negative control (without added DNA). The PCR products were visualized on a 2% agarose gel (Seakem LE agarose, Lonza Group Ltd, Basel, Switzerland). PCR product concentration was normalized using the SequalPrep Normalization Plate (96) kit (Invitrogen, Paisley, UK), following the manufacturer’s instructions. 15 µl of each PCR reaction was bound to the normalization plate. Elution was performed with 20 µl of elution buffer. After elution all PCR reactions were pooled in two 2 ml Eppendorf tubes. The amplicon library was concentrated using the SV gel/PCR clean-up system (Promega, Fitchburg, WI, USA) following the provided instructions of the manufacturer. The entire library was loaded on one column. The library was eluted using 50 µl of DNase-free water with incubation for 60 seconds at 55°C. The elution step was repeated once. The eluted product was subsequently loaded on a 2% agarose gel and primer dimers were removed by excising the PCR band from the gel using a sterile razor. The gel with PCR product was subsequently dissolved using the SV gel/PCR clean-up system and eluted into 50 µl of DNase-free water. The final product was checked on a 2% agarose gel for the presence of primer dimers. The 16S rRNA V3 amplicon library was sequenced using ¾ of a plate (3 lanes) on a 454 GS-FLX sequencer at the Norwegian Sequencing Centre (Univ. of Oslo, Oslo, Norway) [56]. The raw sequences can be obtained from the SRA archive: accession number SRX264805.

Quality Control

The Schloss SOP (www.mothur.org/wiki/Schloss_SOP) was followed to remove sequence noise and PCR artifacts in the sequence data with Mothur (version 1.29.1) [57]. In brief, the flowgrams in the sff file were separated into different samples using the MIDtags and forward primers. Sequences were trimmed to 320 flows and shorter sequences were discarded. Sequence noise was reduced using the shhh.flows command in Mothur. Subsequently, sequences with mismatches in forward primers and/or MID-tags were discarded. The reverse primers and MID-tags were removed after aligning the sequences against the Silva Bacterial reference alignment. In addition unalignable sequences were removed. Subsequently, preclustering was performed followed by chimera checking and removal using the UCHIME implementation in Mothur [58], [59]. Finally, we classified sequences against the RDP reference, to identify sequences classified as chloroplast, mitochondria, Archaea, or Eukarya, and these were subsequently removed. The final clean dataset used in the diversity analysis can be found in File S5.

Diversity Analysis

Bacterial sequence diversity was analyzed for alpha and beta-diversity using Mothur [57]. Alpha-diversity is considered to be the diversity within one sample, while beta-diversity describes the difference in species composition, or turnover of species, among two or more samples [60].

To test the effect of removal of unique reads (singletons) on the alpha-diversity we discarded singleton sequences using the split.abund command in Mothur. In this way we created two datasets with or without unique reads. Both datasets were clustered at the 97% sequence similarity. Alpha-diversity was analyzed for both datasets. For alpha-diversity, sequence effort for every sample was taken into account using rarefaction curves, and diversity estimators were estimated based on standardized samples using the smallest sample (RDC40–2071 reads). Standardization was performed using the sub.sample command in Mothur [61]. The diversity estimators (Chao1, the non-parametric Shannon index, the inverse Simpson index and Good’s coverage) were calculated using 1000 bootstraps to determine confidence intervals (Table S4 in File S1) [61]. Rarefaction curves and rank-abundance curves were created using R-statistics (version 3.0.1). Venn diagrams to display the shared OTUs between the four sample groups were plotted using the R-package Venn Diagram version 1.6.0 and colored using RcolorBrewer version 1.0.

The remaining analysis used the data with unique reads removed. Taxonomic classification of OTUs was done using blast+ (version2.2.28) with the blastN algorithm against the SILVA V108 SSU database with standard settings except the maximum e-value was set to 1.0E-20 [62], [63]. The Blast output files for every sample were analyzed in MEGAN and compared using the following Lowest Common Ancestor Parameters: Minsupport: 1; Minscore: 155; Top-percent: 2% and the Percent Identity Filter activated [64].

To study if communities from the four sample groups were different we analyzed them using various qualitative beta-diversity indices. Mothur was used to calculate distances based on the Jaccard similarity index (community membership) and the Yue and Clayton Theta similarity coefficient (ThetaYC) (community structure) on the standardized OTU abundances. The calculated distances were used as input in Mothur to produce dendrograms based on hierarchical clustering with the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) method. The generated dendrograms were analyzed using the parsimony test implemented in Mothur. To test for significant differences between the four sample groups in our analysis we used the parsimony test implemented in Mothur to analyse the different UPGMA dendrograms.

Using the Clearcut implementation in Mothur we created a phylogenetic tree to measure the genetic diversity between the communities using weighted and unweighted unifrac [65]. The unifrac distance matrices were used to perform ordination analysis with principal coordinates analysis (PCoA) in Mothur and visualized using R-statistics (version 3.0.1).

Metastats Analysis

The Mothur implementation of Metastats was used to determine which OTUs showed a different abundance between the reference and pockmark samples at 40 cm depth [66]. To be significant we used a q-value (false discovery rate corrected p-value) of 0.01 as a maximum. We selected high abundance OTUs with a minimum mean abundance of 0.001 (calculated by Metastats) in at least one of the groups tested in order to increase reliability of the test. The fasta sequences of these OTUs were classified as discussed above.

Statistical Analysis

We used the non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test implemented in R-statistics to test if there were significant differences of the measured chemicals between 1) the two depths (0–4 cm vs 40 cm), 2) The sites (pockmarks vs. reference sites) and 3) between the four groups (PM04, R04, PM40, R40). A p-value <0.05 was considered significant. The hydrocarbons were not included. Due to the small and uneven sample size between the pockmarks and the sediments at both sediment depths we used an additional analysis with a two-sample permutation test implemented in the DAAG package (version 1.16) to test for significant differences for TC, TOC, NPOC and TN.

The package Vegan (version 2.0–8) was used for Analysis of Similarities (ANOSIM), ordination analysis and fitting of environmental parameters onto constrained correspondence analysis (CCA) ordinations. ANOSIM was performed using the Jaccard index, ThetaYC index, unweighted unifrac and weighted unifrac distance matrixes generated in Mothur with either depth or the four groups as variables and with 10000 permutations.

CCA was performed on the subsampled abundance table (Standardized on the smallest sample (RDC40–2071 reads)) to estimate the relation between community composition and the chemical parameters measured except the PAHs. Akaike’s information criterion (AIC) with forward selection was used to identify those chemical variables that explained most of the variation between the communities. TC was identified as the main determinant and was used to constrain the correspondence analysis. Statistical significance of the constrained correspondence analysis was tested using an ANOVA like permutation test with 1000 permutation using the function anova.cca (Vegan). The environmental variables (TC; TOC; IC; NPOC; TN; Na+; K+; Mg2+; Ca2+; F; Cl; SO42−; Br) were tested for significant correlation with the sample distribution in the CCA analysis using the envfit command, with 999 permutations (vegan). Only those factors were fitted that had a p-value <0.01.

Results

Different Sediment Geochemistry between Pockmark and Reference Sites at Two Depths

To address if the pockmark sediments (PM10, PM11 and PM12) are chemically different from the non-pockmark sediments (RD and RE) we measured 13 different variables in all samples and an additional 17 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in only one core at each sample location (Table 2; Table S3 in File S1). Sediments are highly stratified ecosystems in regard to their depth profile, which should be apparent from our chemical data. We used the non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test (KW-test) to identify which environmental variables had significantly different concentrations between the two depths in both pockmark and reference samples (Table 2). The concentrations of TC, TOC and TN (all three variables: p<0.001) were significantly different between 0–4 cm and 40 cm depth. The other variables did not show significant differences between the two depths. TN concentrations are 0.19 (+/−0.08) mg l−1 and 0.58 (0.09) mg l−1 in the surface and deep samples, respectively. The TC concentrations at 0–4 and 40 cm were 3.56 (+/−0.22) % C and 1.36 (+/−0.18) % C respectively, while the TOC concentrations were 2.41 (+/−0.14) % C and 0.92 (+/−0.21) % C for 0–4 and 40 cm respectively. In a similar way the total polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (ΣPAHs) concentrations were high in the 0–4 cm zone (1.81 mg kg−1 (+/−0.26) and low at 40 cm depth (0.08 mg kg−1 (+/−0.02) (KW-test: p<0.01). Interestingly, the DNA concentrations of our samples showed the same pattern. The 0–4 cm horizon (35.5±4.3 ng µl−1) has a higher DNA concentration than the 40 cm sediment horizon (6.4±1.3 ng µl−1) (KW-test: p<0.01).

thumbnail
Table 2. Overview of a selection of chemical variables measured per sample.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.t002

In addition to sediment depth as a factor, we included the origin of the samples, e.g. pockmarks or reference samples as well in our analysis, which resulted in the following four groups: Reference 0–4 cm (R04), Reference 40 cm (R40), Pockmark 0–4 cm (PM04) and Pockmark 40 cm (PM40).

Testing the chemical variables for the combined effect of sediment depth and pockmark vs. reference sediments with the KW-test indicated that TC, TOC, TN and NPOC were significantly different between the four groups of samples (p-values are: <0.001; <0.001; <0.001; p = 0.03) (Table S3 in File S1). Comparing the concentrations at the 40 cm horizon indicated a significant difference between pockmarks and normal sediments for TC, TOC and NPOC (KW-test: p<0.01, while there was no such difference for TN (KW-test: p>0.05). The concentrations were lower at 40 cm depth in the pockmark sediments for TC (1.25% C +/−0.12 vs. 1.52% C +/−0.08) and TOC (0.78% C +/−0.14 vs. 1.12% C +/−0.04) compared to the reference samples. In contrast NPOC concentrations were higher in the 40 cm pockmark sediments compared to the reference samples at the same depth (2.04 mg l−1+/−0.55 vs. 1.22 mg l−1+/−0.22). For TN we did not find a significant difference at 40 cm depth (0.60 mg l−1+/−0.10 vs. 0.56 mg l−1+/−0.06). We confirmed the differences between the pockmarks and the reference sites at 40 cm depth using a two-sample permutation t-test showing similar results (data not shown).

In contrast to the concentrations at 40 cm, we found that at the 0–4 cm horizon TN concentrations were significantly different (KW-test: p = 0.045) (0.22 mg l−1+/−0.08 vs. 0.15 mg l−1+/−0.05). This could however not be not be confirmed by a non-parametric two-sample t-test with permutation (p = 0.07) (Table S3 in File S1).

The ratio between the concentrations of different PAHs (ANT/178, FLT/202, BAA/228 and IND/276) in the surface sediments all suggest that the origin of the PAHs comes from combustion sources (Table S3 in File S1) [38] which is expected in the anthropogenically influenced Oslofjord. The deeper sediments show lower levels for the ANT/178 ratio and the BAA/228, but are still suggesting combustion as the original source of the PAHs. The other two ratios did not show major changes although the IND/276 was slightly higher in the 40 cm sediment zone.

Diversity Estimates

Microbial diversity of the pockmark sediments was studied using 454 pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA V3 region. After denoising, removal of artifacts and chimeras a total of 228927 reads was obtained representing 33571 unique sequences. 19401 (57.8%) of the unique sequences were only represented by a single read (singletons), while 14170 sequences were represented by at least two reads. The high amount of singletons could be due to various errors such PCR base changes or chimera formation and this could lead to an over estimation of OTU numbers with deleterious effects on the alpha and beta-diversity estimations [67][70]. We therefore tested if the removal of singletons had a significant effect on the alpha diversity estimations after clustering the sequences at 97% sequence similarity. Removal of the singletons reduced the total dataset with ≈8.5% to 209526 reads (Table S2 in File S3). The total number of OTUs at the 97% cut-off dropped from 20473 to 9246 OTUs. This reduction of OTUs is less than the 19401 sequences removed, since a fraction of the singletons clustered using the 97% sequence cut-off when singletons were not removed.

Rarefaction analysis indicated a high diversity among the amplicons with the 40 cm horizon being the most diverse in both treatments of the data (Figure 2). Nonetheless, the rarefaction curves after removal of singletons show less diversity and the curves are less steep suggesting that we have captured more of the diversity in the sediments. This is also suggested by a slightly higher average Good’s coverage for all samples (average: 0.77 vs. 0.82) (Table 3).

thumbnail
Figure 2. Rarefaction curves of 16S rRNA sequences at the 97% sequence similarity cut-off.

A) Rarefaction curves with singletons included. B) Rarefaction curves with singletons excluded. The sample coloration descriptions are indicated in the figure. Samples are grouped color wise based on location (pockmark vs. reference sediments) and depth (4 cm vs. 40 cm).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.g002

thumbnail
Table 3. Diversity estimators for the Oslofjord sediment samples after removal of unique sequences.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.t003

After removal of singletons only the non-parametric Shannon index showed a significant difference between the combined (pockmark and reference sites) surface (5.57+/−0.22) and the combined deep (6.13+/−0.17) samples (KW-test: p<0.01), while this was not the case for the other diversity estimators. In addition, the non-parametric Shannon index was significant when the four sample groups, depth (0–4 vs 40 cm) and location (pockmark vs. reference site) were used (KW-test: p<0.01). For the same test the Simpson 1/D index was as well significant (KW-test: p = 0.043), while the richness as measured with Chao1, was highly comparable between the surface and the deep samples when singletons are not included (KW-test: p>0.01) (Table 3, File S3).

The above results indicate that removal of singletons gives a more conservative analysis of the community differences and we therefore continue the discussion based on this notion.

Using rank-abundance curves we determined the distribution of reads over the different OTUs. All samples have fairly similar rank abundance curves (Figure 3A), with the major difference being due to sequencing effort. The rank abundance curve for all detected OTUs shows that one OTU has over 10000 sequences in our dataset. In addition, we find that 28 OTUs out of 9246 are shared among all samples with many of them belonging to the most abundant OTUs found in the dataset (Figure 3A & B). The number of shared OTUs between all samples per group was higher than 28 (PM04: 156; R04: 183; PM40: 182; R40: 127 OTUs). The number of OTUs shared between each of the groups is considerably lower with the least shared OTUs between the samples of groups R04 and R40 (41) (Figure 3B).

thumbnail
Figure 3. Shared OTUs between all samples.

A) Rank abundance curves for all samples at the 97% sequence similarity cut-off. Black depicts the rank abundance curve for all OTUs in all samples. Red indicates the rank abundance curve for the 28 OTUs shared across all samples. In grey the rank abundance curves are plotted for the individual samples B) Venn diagram showing the number of OTUs shared between each of the four groups: Pockmark 0–4 cm (PM04), Pockmark 40 cm (PM40), Reference site 0–4 cm (R04) and Reference site 40 cm (R40).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.g003

Beta-diversity

Estimation of the beta-diversity in our experiment was done in several ways, using either various (dis-) similarity indices (measures) based on the OTU tables or phylogeny-based methods such as Unifrac. We did not test the effect of singleton removal on the beta-diversity estimations since various authors have shown that in most experimental set-ups there is no effect found [71], [72] Using the standardized OTU abundance table we calculated the Jaccard and the ThetaYC dissimilarity indices to identify if our samples had similar community membership and structure. Both indices indicated a strong separation between the 0–4 and 40 cm samples when used to generate UPGMA dendrograms (Jaccard/ThetaYC: parsimony-test: p<0.001) (Figure S1 in File S4). In addition, we find that the 40 cm samples of pockmark and reference sediments are clearly separated (Jaccard/ThetaYC: parsimony-test; p<0.001). The 0–4 cm samples of the reference and pockmark sediments were only significantly different for the Jaccard index (parsimony test; p = 0.049), but not for the ThetaYC index (parsimony test; p = 0.058).

Analysis of similarity (ANOSIM) is a non-parametric test that uses distances based on diversity indices to test for significant difference between samples of multiple groups [73]. Here ANOSIM showed a significant difference between the 0–4 and 40 cm samples for both the Jaccard and the Theta YC indices (R = 0.98; p<0.001). The pockmarks and reference samples of 0–4 cm, were the least divergent in the ANOSIM test (both indices: R = 0,61; p<0.001) while the 40 cm samples show a slightly stronger differentiation (both indices: R = 0.70, p<0.001).

Another way of testing community diversity is to use phylogenetics and measure the distances between the samples with the unifrac method [74]. The Unifrac method can be used to analyze the community membership (unweighted) and structure (weighted). Principal Coordinates Analysis (PCoA) of (un-) weighted unifrac distances confirmed the above findings, showing a difference between the reference and pockmark samples in the community structure at depth but not at the surface (Figure 4, Figure S3 in File S4). The axes of the PCoA of the unweighted unifrac distances explained 20.4% and 4.6% of the variation between the communities (data not shown), while the PCoA using the weighted unifrac distances had axes explaining 60.2 and 5.3% of the variation between communities. This indicates that the 40 cm pockmark samples are different from the reference 40 cm samples in regard to community membership and structure.

thumbnail
Figure 4. Principal Coordinates Analysis ordination using weighted Unifrac distances.

The amount of variation explained for each axis is indicated in percentages. Samples are grouped color wise based on location (pockmark vs. reference sediments) and depth (4 cm vs. 40 cm) in the figure.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.g004

To understand the link between the measured chemical parameters and the observed variation in the bacterial community structure we applied constrained correspondence analysis (CCA). CCA confirmed the strong separation of the communities by depth. Further, it indicated a tight grouping of the 0–4 cm communities independent of the location, while the 40 cm communities were clearly separated between pockmark samples and the reference samples (Figure 5). The strongest chemical determinant between the communities was TC, which explained about 11% of the variation between the communities. Additional factors that explain more of the community variation are TOC and TN (Envfit permutation test: p = 0.001). None of the other measured chemical factors were indicated to have a significant influence on the community compositions.

thumbnail
Figure 5. Relationships between bacterial communities of Oslofjord sediments using constrained correspondence analysis.

Two-dimensional CCA ordination of the samples using one constrained axis (CCA 1) and an unconstrained axis (CA 1). The constraining factor was Total Carbon. Eigenvalue for both axes are indicated beside each axis. Environmental parameters that significantly (p<0.01) correlated with the ordination were fitted using the envfit command (Vegan package). Abbreviations: total nitrogen (TN), total carbon (TC), total organic carbon (TOC).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.g005

Metastats Analysis

Beta-diversity analysis showed that at 40 cm depth, community structure differed when comparing pockmark and reference sediments. Using Metastats it is possible to determine which OTUs are significantly different between the various groups [66]. Metastats first normalizes the abundances in the groups before performing a t-test permutation test. Analysis of all the OTUs with a total mean read abundance in one of the groups higher that 0.001 (calculated by Metastats) showed that 58 OTUs had a significant different read abundance between the reference and pockmark samples at 40 cm depth (q-value <0.01) (Table 4). 25 of these OTUs had a higher abundance in the reference samples, while 33 OTUs had more reads assigned in the pockmark samples.

thumbnail
Table 4. Metastats results of OTUs with significantly different abundances between the 40 cm pockmark and reference sediment samples.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.t004

Classification of OTUs

Taxonomic classification of the OTUs (97% cutoff) against the non-redundant SILVA V108 database at the phylum level shows that a fraction of the OTUs were not assigned (≈0.9–5.2% of total OTUs), did not generate any significant hits (0.01%–0.16%), or were not classified at the phylum level (8%–22%) (Figure 6). For all three groups the 40 cm samples contained a larger fraction of unclassified or poorly classified OTUs. Proteobacteria assigned OTUs dominated in all samples (35–49%) but with a higher abundance in the surface samples. Of all Proteobacterial-assigned OTUs most of them are classified as Deltaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria. Other groups with a higher relative abundance (>2%) of assigned OTUs in the surface than the deep samples are Acidobacteria, Bacteriodetes, Gemmatimonadetes and Verrucomicrobia. For the 40 cm samples the relative abundances (>2%) of assigned OTUs are higher for Planctomycetes, Spirochaetes, Firmicutes, Deferribacteres, Chlamydiae, Actinobacteria and the phylum Nitrospirae (Figure 6).

thumbnail
Figure 6. Phylum level abundances of representative OTU sequences.

The Lowest common ancestor algorithm was used to classify OTU sequences with blastN against the SILVA V108 SSURef database. The phylum Proteobacteria was split to accommodate for the different abundances within the various sub clades. OTUs that did not classify to the proteobacterial subclades were assigned to the taxon Proteobacteria. The group “Not assigned” consists of sequences with significant blast hits but could not be classified using the set LCA parameters. The group “Above phylum” contains OTU sequences assigned to either the kingdom Bacteria or to cellular organisms. Note that only the top 25 taxa are indicated for clarity.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.g006

Taking into account read abundances of the assigned OTU changes the picture of the diversity only slightly (Figure S2 in File S4). Reads assigned to Deltaproteobacteria made up almost 40% (+/−3.67%) on average in all samples. The amount of reads in the non-assigned pool consisted of a smaller fraction of the complete dataset suggesting that many reads belonged to low abundance OTUs. Interestingly, the amount of reads assigned to Nitrospirae represented a much larger fraction of the diversity, especially for the R40 samples (6.0% +/−3.3%).

Classifications of the OTUs identified with the Metastats analysis gave an extra angle on the differences between the PM40 and R40 samples indicating that 4 OTUs could not be reliably classified against the SILVA V108 database. Of the unclassified OTUs, two were more abundant in the PM40 samples while the other two had higher abundances in the N40 samples. The other 54 OTUs were assigned to various taxonomical levels (Table 4), with most of the OTUs assigned to Delta- or Gammaproteobacterial orders such as the Desulfarculales, Desulfobacterales, Thiotrichales and the Xanthomonodales. The latter two taxa had higher abundances in the 40 cm pockmark samples, while the former two taxa showed a mixed pattern with OTUs having higher abundances in either 40 cm pockmark or reference samples. A similar pattern was also found for OTUs in the orders Deferribacterales, Nitrospirales, Spirochaetales and the Syntrophobacterales. For the taxa Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, Fusobacteria and Phycisphaerales the OTUs had higher abundances in the PM40 samples. In contrast, OTUs belonging to the orders Chlorobi, Fibrobacterales, Gemmatimonodales had higher abundances in the R40 samples.

Discussion

Soils and sediments are by far the most diverse microbial ecosystems present on this planet. A recent analysis by the International Census of Marine Microbes (ICoMM) found almost 60000 OTUs in 72 coastal benthic samples with almost 50% of the OTUs only found as singletons [75]. This suggests that sediments show a high microbial diversity per site but also between sites. Thus, it is conceivable that the microbial community diversity of inactive pockmark sediments would be different from normal coastal sediments. Nonetheless, the microbial community composition of inactive pockmark sediments may potentially be influenced by occasional seepage of freshwater, by different organic matter deposition rates, or by a different bioturbating macrofaunal community composition as compared to the surrounding sediments [9], [11], [14], [22]. These influencing factors could be due to lower porewater salinity, or different carbon and/or nitrogen concentrations in the pockmark sediments as compared to the surrounding sediments.

Pockmark Sediment Chemistry

To quantify the influence of freshwater seepage we can measure Na+ or Cl concentrations that determine for a large part the salinity of the sediments. It is well established that salinity gradients affect microbial community composition in marine and freshwater sediments, suggesting that if inactive pockmarks experience occasional freshwater seepage it could affect the pockmark sediment communities [76], [77]. The chemical analysis of the Oslofjord sediments did not indicate any differences in Na+ or Cl concentrations between 0–4 and 40 cm sediments inside our outside the pockmarks, suggesting that at these depths freshwater seepage has no influence on the sediment communities.

Bioturbation or different organic matter deposition rates, which both are implicated in affecting the microbial community composition in pockmark sediments, may alter the biogeochemistry of the sediments due to differences in the carbon and nitrogen concentrations. A comparison of the chemistry concentrations between the pockmark and reference sites for both 0–4 and 40 cm showed significant differences for TN, TC, TOC and PAH concentrations between the two depths of the sediments. At 40 cm depth the TN concentration is higher than at the surface of the sediments. The TN in our samples is mostly likely composed of the NH4+ and NO3 ions as in other organic rich sediments [78], [79]. The composition of TN in such sediments changes with NO3 concentrations decreasing and NH4+ concentrations increasing with depth due to nitrate reduction coupled to organic matter degradation [78][80].

In contrast to the TN concentrations, TC, TOC and PAH levels were highest at 0–4 cm and much lower at 40 cm depth suggesting that carbon sources are deposited from the water column. In addition, the PAH ratios calculated here all seem to indicate that combustion of wood is the major source of the PAHs (ANT178>0.1; BAA228>0.2), which is an additional sign of deposition of carbon from the water column [38].

Surprisingly, the concentrations of NPOC measured from the porewater – basically dissolved organic carbon (DOC) – did not show a depth-related difference. TC and TOC were measured from ground and dried sediments and in theory would be based on dissolved and sediment adhered organic carbon. The amount of DOC detected in porewater is dependent on the sorption coefficient of water soluble organic carbon attached to the sediment [81]. In the literature we find several explanations for the DOC concentrations at different sediment depths [77], [78]. A large fraction of the organic matter is adsorbed to the surface of sediment particles during sedimentation, and only a small fraction will be released again into the pore water and detected as DOC [82]. Alternatively, with depth the potential of the microbial community to hydrolyze DOC decreases allowing for a persistence of DOC concentrations with depth [83]. Our results suggest that TC/TOC concentrations decrease with depth, while NPOC concentrations remain fairly constant, but this remains speculative since we did not measure the intermediate depths. Nonetheless, TOC concentrations found in another study from the Oslofjord did decline with depth, however only after an initial increase at the top sediments [84]. Nonetheless, we find similar values for the surface as well as the deeper sediments in our study as in Arp et al., (2011) suggesting the same concentration pattern in our sediments.

Comparison of the chemical concentrations at the same depth between the pockmark and reference sediments did not show significant differences for the 0–4 cm samples. For the 40 cm depth a small and significant difference was found for TC, TOC and NPOC between the pockmark and the reference sites. Interestingly, TOC and NPOC concentrations showed opposing patterns with TOC concentrations being lower in the pockmarks while NPOC showed higher concentrations in the pockmarks (Table 2). These contrasting results could be caused by differences in the release or hydrolysis of DOC within the sediments of our study sites [83]. It also suggests that between pockmark and normal coastal sediments degradation rates of organic matter might be different.

The biogeochemistry analysis of the pockmark and reference sediments does not distinguish between the two factors, differences in either hydrodynamic regime or bioturbation, as a source for microbial community differences. As we did not determine the macrofaunal community composition in each of our samples sites we cannot conclude concerning the importance of this factor for the chemical differences. Regarding different hydrodynamic regimes within and outside the inactive pockmarks, it is known that different deposition rates of organic matter can influence the microbial community richness, but so far this has only been shown in oligotrophic marine surface (0–5 cm) sediments [33]. The Oslofjord is not an oligotrophic environment, and in line with Bienhold et al., (2012) a difference between the 0–4 cm microbial communities of the pockmarks and the references sediments was not found, which indicates that organic matter deposition rates are similar at both sites [84]. An additional factor influenced by different sedimentation rates could be the grain size of the pockmark sediments [14]. Interestingly, several recent studies identified grain size as an environmental variable that influences bacterial community composition in sediments and is closely correlated with TOC concentrations [85][89]. Basically, with increasing mud content of sediments TOC concentrations increase as well as total microbial and bacterial biomass [89]. Although highly speculative, this suggests that the pockmark in our study have a slightly larger grain size as well as slightly lower bacterial abundances. Regardless, our chemical analysis indicates that at 40 cm depth there is a significant difference between pockmarks and surroundings sediments and this is supported by our microbial community analysis.

Effect of Singleton Removal on Alpha Diversity

454 pyrosequencing of the V3 region of the 16S rRNA revealed a tremendous diversity in our sediment samples. Our results indicated that the communities are extremely diverse with more than 20000 OTUs found in 30 samples at a 97% similarity cut-off (Figure 2). Almost 50% of the detected taxa were represented by a single sequence as found in other studies [75]. It is however unclear if all these single sequences represent a real rare biosphere species or are due to PCR or sequencing errors [68]. Removal of the unique sequences reduced the total diversity of this study to 9246 OTUs with a significant reduction of observed OTUs per sample (Figure 2, Table 3). This did not alter the significant difference between the rarefaction curves of the 40 cm and the 0–4 cm samples with the former indicating a higher general diversity (Figure 2, File S3). In contrast, for most alpha diversity estimators, except the non-parametric Shannon index, removal of singletons did eradicate the significant difference in observed diversity between the two studied depths (File S3). The non-parametric Shannon index, which measures both richness and evenness indicated that there is a significant differences between the 0–4 and 40 cm communities, suggesting that the species are more equally distributed deeper in the sediments than at the surface with rare species more easily detected [33], [90], [91]. In line with this we find not only more OTUs, but also more singleton OTUs per sample at 40 cm depth (Table 3).

The removal of singletons improved classification of the OTUs considerably. With singletons included we found 16–27% of the OTUs unclassified (data not shown), while singleton removal reduced the number of unclassified OTUs to 0.9–5.2%. This implies that most of the removed singletons contained artifacts not representing unidentified species [67][70].

Our results with singletons removed still indicate the presence of an extensive rare biosphere in the sediments accounting for most of the diversity. The high diversity of the samples is also evident from the amount of OTUs shared between the four groups where we only found 28 shared OTUs between all samples (Figure 3). Within each group the amount of shared OTUs is considerably higher but is still approximately 10% of the total OTUs detected per sample. This suggests that our sequencing effort should have been larger to increase the overlap between the communities [92]. Even so, compared with relevant studies we find similar levels of diversity in the Oslofjord sediments [44], [93].

Pockmark Sediment Community

To address if there is a difference between the pockmark and control sediment communities, we used beta-diversity indices based on either sequence similarity (OTUs) or phylogenetic distances. In the latter case we used (un-) weighted Unifrac to measure similarity between the communities [94], while in the former case we used OTU community composition to either calculate the Jaccard, ThetaYC or Chi-square (CCA analysis) distances.

Both Unifrac and the OTU based analyses indicated a significant difference between the 0–4 cm and 40 cm communities and between the PM40 and R40 samples. At the 0–4 cm depth only the Jaccard index showed a significant difference between pockmark and reference sediments, but this was not identified with ANOSIM. The significant difference between the 0–4 and 40 cm communities was expected and is in line with previous studies and our alpha diversity analysis. It is well known that microbial community composition changes with depth following the nutrient status and redox potential within sediments [52], [88], [95].

The difference between the 40 cm communities of the pockmarks and the reference samples is not easily explained. We therefore used CCA to correlate the chemistry data with the OTU abundances of each of the communities (Figure 5). In line with the chemistry results, the CCA indicated that TC, TOC and TN were the main determinants explaining the community differences between the samples, and that they explain mostly the difference between the 0–4 and 40 cm samples. Additionally, the vectors for TC and TOC seem to indicate that the reference samples have slightly higher concentrations for these variables, which could be an explanation for the small differences in community composition between the pockmark and reference samples.

Taxonomic Diversity

The results from the diversity analysis indicated a significant difference between the 40 cm communities of the pockmarks and the reference sites. An analysis of the phylum level classifications indicated several groups with different OTU abundances with regard to sediment depth. The number of OTUs assigned to only the taxonomical level Bacteria (above phylum), non-assigned and no-hits was higher in the 40 cm samples. This result could be due to erroneous doubletons, or the presence of unidentified phyla in the sediment samples not present in the SILVA V108 database. Recently, several novel phyla were targeted using single-cell genome sequencing suggesting that the diversity of environmental communities is far from completely mapped [96].

The classification results of the OTUs identified at 97% sequence similarity cut-off indicated the dominance of Delta- and Gammaproteobacterial species in the 40 cm sediments of all samples followed by Acidobacteria, Bacteriodetes, and Planctomycetes (Figure 6). These groups are known to dominate marine sediments and the diversity within these groups is comparable to other studies [44], [75], [93].

The Delta- and Gammaproteobacterial spp. contain many sulfate reducers which are typical constituents of marine sediments. Interestingly, the diversity of Deltaproteobacteria seems comparable between the PM40 and R40 samples (Figure 6). This is as well reflected by the Deltaproteobacterial OTUs identified with Metastats (Table 4). Their classifications at the order level show that some orders can be found as different OTUs with significantly different abundances in either the PM40 or R40 samples. For the Gammaproteobacteria we find OTUs belonging to the Xanthomonadales and Thiotrichales being overrepresented in the PM40 samples compared to R40, which coincides with a general higher diversity of Gammaproteobacteria in the PM40 samples (Table 4, Figure 6, Figure S2 in File S4). The Thiotrichales contains species such as the sulfur oxidizing Beggiatoa and Thioplaca spp. that use anaerobic reduction of nitrate coupled to oxidation of organic matter and/or sulfur [97]. The order Xanthomonadales contains important plant pathogens such as Xylella spp., but has recently also been shown to contain PAH degraders, which suggest that Xanthomomodales in sediments are involved in the breakdown of complex organic matter [98].

At 40 cm depth both the Acidobacteria and Bacteriodetes OTUs have lower diversity compared to the 0–4 cm samples (Figure 6). Among the Bacteriodetes OTUs there were none that were overrepresented between the PM40 or R40 samples, while for Acidobacteria we find several OTUs overrepresented in the PM40 samples (Table 4). Acidobacteria were first described in highly acidic soils, but their presence in marine and freshwater sediments has been shown repeatedly with OTU abundances around 5% [44], [93], [99]. A recent comparative genomic analysis of three Acidobacterial isolates indicated that this group is capable of degradation of complex compounds such as cellulose, chitin, using nitrate/nitrite reduction, indicative of their importance as organic matter degraders in sediments [100]. Other known degraders of complex compounds are found in the phylum Bacteroidetes and their abundance is tightly linked with organic matter concentrations [83], [101].

In contrast to Gammaproteobacteria, Acidobacteria and Bacteroidetes, we find higher diversity levels for the Planctomycetes at 40 cm, which coincides with the phylum Spirochaetes and higher read abundances for the Actinobacterial assigned OTUs (Figure 6, Figure S2 in File S4). Further, these taxa also contain several OTUs that were overrepresented in the PM40 samples. As a taxon Planctomycetes is well known for its capacity to perform anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox), but has been implicated in the degradation of organic matter in the environment as well [86], [102], [103]. The single OTU overrepresented in the Planctomycetes belongs to the order Phycisphaerales (Table 4). This order is represented by an anaerobic isolate capable of reducing nitrate and breaking down agar [104]. The phylum Spirochaetes is characterized by mostly anaerobic bacteria degrading complex carbohydrates and fermentation [105]. Finally, the Actinobacteria are well known for their capacity to mineralize organic matter such as cellulose or chitin [106].

Bacterial phyla that have overrepresented OTUs among the R40 samples can be classified as Nitrospirae, Gemmatimonadetes and the Deferribacteres (Table 4). Members of the Deferribacteres are often identified in extreme environments such as hydrothermal vents or oil production facilities, but are occasionally found in sediments at low abundances [107], [108]. Members of this phylum use nitrate/sulfur/sulphate reduction to oxidize small carbohydrates such as fumarate, malate and acetate. In line with this anaerobic lifestyle, we find higher Deferribacteres diversity at 40 cm compared to 0–4 cm (Figure 6) [109][111]. The phylum of Gemmatimonadetes is little characterized and mainly found in soils [112]. Fertilization of soils increases the Gemmatimonadetes OTU abundances indicating their role as heterotrophic bacteria influenced by nitrogen and carbon [113]. Interestingly, they can be found in the marine sediments such as the oxic sediments of the Pacific abyss and in the Oslofjord sediments analyzed here [107]. Finally, the highest diversity levels for the phylum Nitrospirae were found in the R40 samples, with several OTUs overrepresented (Figure 6, Table 4). The Nitrospirae are known as chemoautotrophic bacteria involved in the nitrogen cycle and several members are involved in nitrite oxidation while sharing genes with anammox bacteria [114], [115].

Many of the identified overrepresented OTUs belong to bacterial orders that are not well studied, and the metabolic properties derived from the literature are often based on a few well-studied isolates. We find that most of the above mentioned taxa are involved in nitrate, nitrite or sulfur reduction associated with oxidation of organic matter. Interestingly, the molecular complexity of the degraded organic matter is different between the phyla. Most of the overrepresented OTUs in the PM40 sample are implicated in the degradation of complex carbohydrates. In contrast, the overrepresented OTUs in the R40 samples either breakdown small carbohydrates (Deferribacteres spp.) or they might have a autotrophic lifestyle (Nitrospirae spp.) which does not rely on organic matter breakdown.

All the 40 cm samples had similar TN concentrations, but there was a clear difference for TC, TOC and NPOC concentrations between the pockmark and the reference samples at this depth (Table 2). For TC we can explain the lower concentrations in the PM40 samples by the increased abundance of OTUs related to phyla with the capacity to degrade complex macromolecules that are less prominent in the reference sediments. In addition, the reference samples could have a community more adapted to use small soluble carbohydrates decreasing the DOC concentrations in the porewater. Our findings suggest that slightly different in-situ sediment conditions can alter the C:N ratio of the sediments. Furthermore, this work supports that the surface sediment communities are highly influenced by the above-lying water column, while communities at 40 cm depth are site specific [52], [88], [89].

Conclusions

We have shown that microbial communities in inactive pockmark sediments are highly diverse and have a depth-related structure just like normal sediment communities. Despite being influenced by the same water body of the Oslofjord, we demonstrate that the pockmarks have a different community structure at 40 cm depth compared to surrounding sediments. In contrast, surface sediments of inactive pockmarks are indistinguishable from the surrounding sediments. Our work gave no indications on which factors cause this depth difference, but there are hints that we should investigate the factors that affect degradation rates of complex carbohydrates. In addition, our findings indicate that we can use inactive pockmark sediments for exploring the influence of physical variables, such as sedimentation rates, grain size and sediment porosity on microbial community structure. Finally, these results have implications for research comparing microbial sediment communities in relation to geological features. The sediment surface communities do not show differences, while deeper buried communities seem to be influenced by local conditions. It suggests that for the deeper sediment layers local conditions are stronger determinants for the microbial community composition and structure than at the sediment surface.

Supporting Information

File S1.

This file contains Table S1–Table S4. Table S1, Pairwise distances between sample locations. Table S2, Visual observations for each core taken in the present study. Table S3, Combined chemistry data from the different measurements done on the Oslofjord samples. Table S4, Diversity estimates for bacterial sequences with confidence intervals.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.s001

(XLSX)

File S2.

Supplementary information with the sequences of the Primers, MID-tags and adaptors used for amplification of the 16S rRNA V3 region.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.s002

(XLSX)

File S3.

This file contains four tables (Table S1–Table S4) on the comparison of the alpha diversity with and without unique reads included. Table S1, Comparison of alpha diversity estimators with and without removal of unique sequences. Table S2, Overview of the average differences per alpha diversity estimator. Table S3, Side by side comparisons of alpha diversity estimators. Table S4, Kruskal-Wallis test to test for significance in the Alpha diversity estimators with and without removal of unique sequences.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.s003

(XLSX)

File S4.

This file contains Figure S1–Figure S3. Figure S1, UPGMA dendrograms of the Oslofjord pockmark and reference sites sediment communities. Figure S2, Phylum level abundances of all sequences. Figure S3, Principal coordinates analysis ordination using Unifrac distances.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.s004

(DOCX)

File S5.

Supplementary archive file containing the files: final.fasta, final.names, final.groups and final.taxonomy, which were used to do the diversity analysis for this publication. The tar archive can be uncompressed using uncompression software such as tar or winzip. To uncompress the data (≈30 Mb) with the tar software type at the command line: tar -xzvf additional_file_5_final_data.tar.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085990.s005

(TAR)

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the crew of the Research vessel Trygve Braarud for their assistance in obtaining the samples, Mufak Naoroz and Berit Kaasa for chemical analysis of the pore water and the Norwegian Sequencing Centre (www.sequencing.uio.no) for performing the amplicon sequencing. In addition, we thank three anonymous reviewers for the critical and insightful comments, which helped to improve the article.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: THAH ØH KSJ. Performed the experiments: THAH ØH. Analyzed the data: THAH ØH KSJ. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: THAH ØH KSJ. Wrote the paper: THAH ØH KJS.

References

  1. 1. King LH, MacLean B (1970) Pockmarks on the Scotian shelf. Geol Soc Am Bull 81: 3141–3148.
  2. 2. Hovland M, Gardner JV, Judd AG (2002) The significance of pockmarks to understanding fluid flow processes and geohazards. Geofluids 2: 127–136
  3. 3. Judd AG, Hovland M (2007) Seabed fluid flow: the impact of geology, biology and the marine environment. 1st ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 492 pp.
  4. 4. Chand S, Rise L, Ottesen D, Dolan M, Bellec V, et al. (2009) Pockmark-like depressions near the Goliat hydrocarbon field, Barents Sea: Morphology and genesis. Marine and Petroleum Geology 26: 1035–1042
  5. 5. Hovland M, Heggland R, De Vries MH, Tjelta TI (2010) Unit-pockmarks and their potential significance for predicting fluid flow. Marine and Petroleum Geology 27: 1190–1199
  6. 6. Cathles LM, Su Z, Chen D (2010) The physics of gas chimney and pockmark formation, with implications for assessment of seafloor hazards and gas sequestration. Marine and Petroleum Geology 27: 82–91
  7. 7. Brothers LL, Kelley JT, Belknap DF, Barnhardt WA, Andrews BD, et al. (2011) More than a century of bathymetric observations and present-day shallow sediment characterization in Belfast Bay, Maine, USA: implications for pockmark field longevity. Geo-Mar Lett 31: 237–248
  8. 8. Wildish DJ, Akagi HM, McKeown DL, Pohle GW (2008) Pockmarks influence benthic communities in Passamaquoddy Bay, Bay of Fundy, Canada. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 357: 51–66
  9. 9. Hammer Ø, Webb KE (2010) Piston coring of Inner Oslofjord pockmarks, Norway: constraints on age and mechanism. Norwegian Journal of Geology 90: 79–91.
  10. 10. Webb KE, Hammer Ø, Lepland A, Gray JS (2009) Pockmarks in the inner Oslofjord, Norway. Geo-Mar Lett 29: 111–124
  11. 11. Webb KE, Barnes DK, Gray JS (2009) Benthic ecology of pockmarks in the Inner Oslofjord, Norway. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 387: 15–25
  12. 12. Manley PL, Manley TO, Watzin MC, Gutierrez J (2004) Lakebed pockmarks in Burlington Bay, Lake Champlain: I. hydrodynamics and implications of origin. In: Manley PL, Manley TO, Mihuc TB, editors. Lake Champlain: partnerships and research in the rew millennium. New York: Springer-Verlag US. 299–329. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-4080-6_17.
  13. 13. Hammer Ø, Webb KE, Depreiter D (2009) Numerical simulation of upwelling currents in pockmarks, and data from the Inner Oslofjord, Norway. Geo-Mar Lett 29: 269–275
  14. 14. Pau M, Hammer Ø (2013) Sediment mapping and long-term monitoring of currents and sediment fluxes in pockmarks in the Oslofjord, Norway. Mar Geol: 262–273. doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2013.09.012.
  15. 15. Cambon-Bonavita MA, Nadalig T, Roussel E, Delage E, Duperron S, et al. (2009) Diversity and distribution of methane-oxidizing microbial communities associated with different faunal assemblages in a giant pockmark of the Gabon continental margin. Deep Sea Res Part 2 Top Stud Oceanogr 56: 2248–2258
  16. 16. Knab NJ, Cragg BA, Borowski C, Parkes RJ, Pancost R, et al. (2008) Anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) in marine sediments from the Skagerrak (Denmark): I. Geochemical and microbiological analyses. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 72: 2868–2879
  17. 17. Merkel AY, Chernykh NA, Kanapatskii TA, Pimenov NV (2010) Detection of methanotrophic archaea in pockmark sediments (Gdansk Deep, Baltic Sea) by sequence analysis of the gene encoding the α subunit of methyl-coenzyme M reductase. Microbiology 79: 849–852
  18. 18. Zeppilli D, Canals M, Danovaro R (2012) Pockmarks enhance deep-sea benthic biodiversity: a case study in the western Mediterranean Sea. Divers Distrib: 1–15. doi:10.1111/j.1472-4642.2011.00859.x.
  19. 19. Pimenov NV, Ul’yanova MO, Kanapatskii TA, Sivkov VV, Ivanov MV (2008) Microbiological and biogeochemical processes in a pockmark of the Gdansk Depression, Baltic Sea. Microbiology 77: 579–586
  20. 20. Shubenkova OV, Likhoshvai AV, Kanapatskii TA, Pimenov NV (2010) Microbial community of reduced pockmark sediments (Gdansk Deep, Baltic Sea). Microbiology 79: 799–808
  21. 21. Håvelsrud OE, Haverkamp THA, Kristensen T, Jakobsen KS, Rike AG (2012) Metagenomic and geochemical characterization of pockmarked sediments overlaying the Troll petroleum reservoir in the North Sea. BMC microbiology 12: 203
  22. 22. Kristensen E, Penha-Lopes G, Delefosse M, Valdemarsen TB, Quintana CO, et al. (2012) What is bioturbation? The need for a precise definition for fauna in aquatic sciences. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 446: 285–302
  23. 23. Nascimento FJ, Näslund J, Elmgren R (2012) Meiofauna enhances organic matter mineralization in soft sediment ecosystems. Limnol Oceanogr 57: 338–346
  24. 24. Nogaro G, Hammerschmidt CR (2013) Influence of benthic macrofauna on microbial production of methylmercury in sediments on the New England continental shelf. Hydrobiologia 701: 289–299
  25. 25. Mermillod-Blondin F, Rosenberg R, François-Carcaillet F, Norling K, Mauclaire L (2004) Influence of bioturbation by three benthic infaunal species on microbial communities and biogeochemical processes in marine sediment. Aquat Microb Ecol 36: 271–284
  26. 26. Papaspyrou S, Gregersen T, Cox RP (2005) Sediment properties and bacterial community in burrows of the ghost shrimp Pestarella tyrrhena (Decapoda: Thalassinidea). Aquat Microb Ecol 38: 181–190
  27. 27. Bertics VJ, Ziebis W (2009) Biodiversity of benthic microbial communities in bioturbated coastal sediments is controlled by geochemical microniches. ISME J 3: 1269–1285
  28. 28. Laverock B, Smith CJ, Tait K, Osborn AM, Widdicombe S, et al. (2010) Bioturbating shrimp alter the structure and diversity of bacterial communities in coastal marine sediments. ISME J 4: 1531–1544
  29. 29. Pop Ristova P, Wenzhöfer F, Ramette A, Zabel M, Fischer D, et al. (2012) Bacterial diversity and biogeochemistry of different chemosynthetic habitats of the REGAB cold seep (West African margin, 3160 m water depth). Biogeosci Discuss 9: 8337–8385
  30. 30. Turner JT (2002) Zooplankton fecal pellets, marine snow and sinking phytoplankton blooms. Aquat Microb Ecol 27: 57–102
  31. 31. Orcutt BN, Sylvan JB, Knab NJ, Edwards KJ (2011) Microbial ecology of the dark ocean above, at, and below the seafloor. Microbiol Mol Biol Rev 75: 361–422
  32. 32. Graf G (1989) Benthic-pelagic coupling in a deep-sea benthic community. Nature 341: 437–439.
  33. 33. Bienhold C, Boetius A, Ramette A (2012) The energy-diversity relationship of complex bacterial communities in Arctic deep-sea sediments. ISME J 6: 724–732
  34. 34. Arp HPH, Breedveld GD, Cornelissen G (2009) Estimating the in situ sediment-porewater distribution of PAHs and chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons in anthropogenic impacted sediments. Environ Sci Technol 43: 5576–5585
  35. 35. Haritash AK, Kaushik CP (2009) Biodegradation aspects of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs): a review. J Hazard Mater 169: 1–15
  36. 36. Peng R-H, Xiong A-S, Xue Y, Fu X-Y, Gao F, et al. (2008) Microbial biodegradation of polyaromatic hydrocarbons. FEMS Microbiol Rev 32: 927–955
  37. 37. Pereira WE, Hostettler FD, Luoma SN, van Geen A, Fuller CC, et al. (1999) Sedimentary record of anthropogenic and biogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in San Francisco Bay, California. Mar Chem 64: 99–113.
  38. 38. Yunker MB, Macdonald RW, Vingarzan R, Mitchell RH, Goyette D, et al. (2002) PAHs in the Fraser River basin: a critical appraisal of PAH ratios as indicators of PAH source and composition. Org Geochem 33: 489–515.
  39. 39. Eide I, Berg T, Thorvaldsen B, Christensen GN, Savinov V, et al. (2011) Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in dated freshwater and marine sediments along the Norwegian coast. Water, Air, & Soil Pollution 218: 387–398
  40. 40. Jetten MSM (2008) The microbial nitrogen cycle. Environ Microbiol 10: 2903–2909
  41. 41. Dalsgaard T, Thamdrup B, Canfield DE (2005) Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) in the marine environment. Res Microbiol 156: 457–464
  42. 42. Burgin AJ, Hamilton SK (2007) Have we overemphasized the role of denitrification in aquatic ecosystems? A review of nitrate removal pathways. Front Ecol Environ 5: 89–96.
  43. 43. Jäntti H, Stange F, Leskinen E, Hietanen S (2011) Seasonal variation in nitrification and nitrate-reduction pathways in coastal sediments in the Gulf of Finland, Baltic Sea. Aquat Microb Ecol 63: 171–181
  44. 44. Wang Y, Sheng H-F, He Y, Wu J-Y, Jiang Y-X, et al. (2012) Comparison of the levels of bacterial diversity in freshwater, intertidal wetland, and marine sediments by using millions of illumina tags. Appl Environ Microbiol 78: 8264–8271
  45. 45. Rebata-Landa V, Santamarina JC (2006) Mechanical limits to microbial activity in deep sediments. Geochem Geophys Geosyst 7: Q11006
  46. 46. Bartlett R, Bottrell SH, Sinclair K, Thornton S, Fielding ID, et al. (2010) Lithological controls on biological activity and groundwater chemistry in Quaternary sediments. Hydrological Processes 24: 726–735
  47. 47. Müller H, Dobeneck von T, Nehmiz W, Hamer K (2011) Near-surface electromagnetic, rock magnetic, and geochemical fingerprinting of submarine freshwater seepage at Eckernförde Bay (SW Baltic Sea). Geo-Mar Lett 31: 123–140
  48. 48. Whiticar MJ (2002) Diagenetic relationships of methanogenesis, nutrients, acoustic turbidity, pockmarks and freshwater seepages in Eckernförde Bay. Mar Geol 182: 29–53.
  49. 49. Parkes RJ, Cragg BA, Wellsbury P (2000) Recent studies on bacterial populations and processes in subseafloor sediments: a review. Hydrogeol J 8: 11–28.
  50. 50. Urakawa H, Yoshida T, Nishimura M, Ohwada K (2000) Characterization of depth-related population variation in microbial communities of a coastal marine sediment using 16S rDNA-based approaches and quinone profiling. Environ Microbiol 2: 542–554.
  51. 51. Shivaji S, Kumari K, Kishore KH, Pindi PK, Rao PS, et al. (2011) Vertical distribution of bacteria in a lake sediment from Antarctica by culture-independent and culture-dependent approaches. Res Microbiol 162: 191–203
  52. 52. Jørgensen SL, Hannisdal B, Lanzén A (2012) Correlating microbial community profiles with geochemical data in highly stratified sediments from the Arctic Mid-Ocean Ridge Vol. 109: E2846–E2855
  53. 53. Wang J, Wu Y, Jiang H, Li C, Dong H, et al. (2008) High beta diversity of bacteria in the shallow terrestrial subsurface. Environ Microbiol 10: 2537–2549
  54. 54. Pachiadaki MG, Kallionaki A, Dählmann A, Lange GJ, Kormas KA (2011) Diversity and spatial distribution of prokaryotic communities along a sediment vertical profile of a deep-sea mud volcano. Microb Ecol. 62: 655–668
  55. 55. Huse SM, Dethlefsen L, Huber JA, Welch DM, Relman DA, et al. (2008) Exploring microbial diversity and taxonomy using SSU rRNA hypervariable tag sequencing. PLoS Genet 4: e1000255
  56. 56. Margulies M, Egholm M, Altman WE, Attiya S, Bader JS, et al. (2005) Genome sequencing in microfabricated high-density picolitre reactors. Nature 437: 376–380
  57. 57. Schloss PD, Westcott SL, Ryabin T, Hall JR, Hartmann M, et al. (2009) Introducing mothur: open-source, platform-independent, community-supported software for describing and comparing microbial communities. Appl Environ Microbiol 75: 7537–7541
  58. 58. Edgar RC, Haas BJ, Clemente JC, Quince C, Knight R (2011) UCHIME improves sensitivity and speed of chimera detection. Bioinformatics 27: 2194–2200
  59. 59. Huse SM, Welch DM, Morrison HG, Sogin ML (2010) Ironing out the wrinkles in the rare biosphere through improved OTU clustering. Environ Microbiol 12: 1889–1898
  60. 60. Magurran AE (2007) Measuring biological diversity. 5 ed. Malden, USA: Blackwell publishing. 256 pp.
  61. 61. Lemos LN, Fulthorpe RR, Triplett EW, Roesch LFW (2011) Rethinking microbial diversity analysis in the high throughput sequencing era. J Microbiol Methods 86: 42–51
  62. 62. Camacho C, Coulouris G, Avagyan V, Ma N, Papadopoulos J, et al. (2009) BLAST+: architecture and applications. BMC Bioinformatics 10: 421
  63. 63. Quast C, Pruesse E, Yilmaz P, Gerken J, Schweer T, et al. (2013) The SILVA ribosomal RNA gene database project: improved data processing and web-based tools. Nucleic Acids Res 41: D590–D596
  64. 64. Lanzén A, Jørgensen SL, Huson DH, Gorfer M, Grindhaug SH, et al. (2012) CREST - classification resources for environmental sequence tags. PLoS ONE 7: e49334
  65. 65. Evans J, Sheneman L, Foster J (2006) Relaxed neighbor joining: a fast distance-based phylogenetic tree construction method. J Mol Evol 62: 785–792
  66. 66. White JR, Nagarajan N, Pop M (2009) Statistical methods for detecting differentially abundant features in clinical metagenomic samples. PLoS Comput Biol 5: e1000352
  67. 67. Reeder J, Knight R (2009) The “rare biosphere”: a reality check. Nat Meth 6: 636–637.
  68. 68. Kunin V, Engelbrektson A, Ochman H, Hugenholtz P (2010) Wrinkles in the rare biosphere: pyrosequencing errors can lead to artificial inflation of diversity estimates. Environ Microbiol 12: 118–123
  69. 69. Quince C, Lanzén A, Davenport RJ, Turnbaugh PJ (2011) Removing noise from pyrosequenced amplicons. BMC Bioinformatics 12: 38
  70. 70. Zhou J, Wu L, Deng Y, Zhi X, Jiang Y-H, et al. (2011) Reproducibility and quantitation of amplicon sequencing-based detection. ISME J 5: 1303–1313
  71. 71. Gobet A, Boetius A, Ramette A (2013) Ecological coherence of diversity patterns derived from classical fingerprinting and Next Generation Sequencing techniques. Environ Microbiol. doi:10.1111/1462-2920.12308.
  72. 72. Jacob M, Soltwedel T, Boetius A, Ramette A (2013) Biogeography of Deep-Sea Benthic Bacteria at Regional Scale (LTER HAUSGARTEN, Fram Strait, Arctic). PLoS ONE 8: e72779
  73. 73. Clarke KR (1993) Non-parametric multivariate analyses of changes in community structure. Australian journal of ecology 18: 117–143
  74. 74. Lozupone C, Knight R (2005) UniFrac: a new phylogenetic method for comparing microbial communities. Appl Environ Microbiol 71: 8228–8235
  75. 75. Zinger L, Amaral-Zettler LA, Fuhrman JA, Horner-Devine MC, Huse SM, et al. (2011) Global patterns of bacterial beta-diversity in seafloor and seawater ecosystems. PLoS ONE 6: e24570
  76. 76. Freitag TE, Chang L, Prosser JI (2006) Changes in the community structure and activity of betaproteobacterial ammonia-oxidizing sediment bacteria along a freshwater-marine gradient. Environ Microbiol 8: 684–696
  77. 77. Reed HE, Martiny JB (2012) Microbial composition affects the functioning of estuarine sediments. ISME J 7: 868–879
  78. 78. Dale AW, Sommer S, Bohlen L, Treude T, Bertics VJ, et al. (2011) Rates and regulation of nitrogen cycling in seasonally hypoxic sediments during winter (Boknis Eck, SW Baltic Sea): Sensitivity to environmental variables. Estuar Coast Shelf Sci 95: 14–28
  79. 79. Bohlen L, Dale AW, Sommer S, Mosch T, Hensen C, et al. (2011) Benthic nitrogen cycling traversing the capitalize peruvian oxygen minimum zone. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 75: 6094–6111
  80. 80. Gihring TM, Lavik G, Kuypers MM, Kostka JE (2010) Direct determination of nitrogen cycling rates and pathways in Arctic fjord sediments (Svalbard, Norway). Limnol Oceanogr 55: 740–752
  81. 81. Tao S, Lin B (2000) Water soluble organic carbon and its measurement in soil and sediment. Water Res 34: 1751–1755
  82. 82. Thimsen CA, Keil RG (1998) Potential interactions between sedimentary dissolved organic matter and mineral surfaces. Mar Chem 62: 65–76
  83. 83. Julies EM, Fuchs BM, Arnosti C, Brüchert V (2010) Organic carbon degradation in anoxic organic-rich shelf sediments: biogeochemical rates and microbial abundance. Geomicrobiology J 27: 303–314
  84. 84. Arp HPH, Villers F, Lepland A, Kalaitzidis S, Christanis K, et al. (2011) Influence of historical industrial epochs on pore water and partitioning profiles of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and polychlorinated biphenyls in Oslo Harbor, Norway, sediment cores. Environ Toxicol Chem 30: 843–851
  85. 85. Jackson CR, Weeks AQ (2008) Influence of particle size on bacterial community structure in aquatic sediments as revealed by 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. Appl Environ Microbiol 74: 5237–5240
  86. 86. Dang H, Chen R, Wang L, Guo L, Chen P, et al. (2010) Environmental factors shape sediment anammox bacterial communities in hypernutrified Jiaozhou Bay, China. Appl Environ Microbiol 76: 7036–7047
  87. 87. Tsuboi S, Amemiya T, Seto K, Itoh K, Rajendran N (2013) The ecological roles of bacterial populations in the surface sediments of coastal lagoon environments in Japan as revealed by quantification and qualification of 16S rDNA. World J Microbiol Biotechnol 29: 759–774
  88. 88. Reese BK, Mills HJ, Dowd SE, Morse JW (2013) Linking molecular microbial ecology to geochemistry in a coastal hypoxic zone. Geomicrobiology J 30: 160–172
  89. 89. Koster M, Meyer-Reil LA (2001) Characterization of carbon and microbial biomass pools in shallow water coastal sediments of the southern Baltic Sea (Nordrugensche Bodden). Mar Ecol Prog Ser 214: 25–41
  90. 90. Gibbons SM, Caporaso JG, Pirrung M, Field D, Knight R, et al. (2013) Evidence for a persistent microbial seed bank throughout the global ocean. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 110: 4651–4655
  91. 91. Jones SE, Lennon JT (2010) Dormancy contributes to the maintenance of microbial diversity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 107: 5881–5886
  92. 92. Zhou J, Jiang Y-H, Deng Y, Shi Z, Zhou BY, et al. (2013) Random sampling process leads to overestimation of β-diversity of microbial communities. MBio 4: e00324–13
  93. 93. Bowen JL, Morrison HG, Hobbie JE, Sogin ML (2012) Salt marsh sediment diversity: a test of the variability of the rare biosphere among environmental replicates. ISME J 6: 2014–2023
  94. 94. Lozupone C, Lladser ME, Knights D, Stombaugh J, Knight R (2010) UniFrac: an effective distance metric for microbial community comparison. ISME J 5: 169–172
  95. 95. Reed AJ, Lutz RA, Vetriani C (2006) Vertical distribution and diversity of bacteria and archaea in sulfide and methane-rich cold seep sediments located at the base of the Florida Escarpment. Extremophiles 10: 199–211
  96. 96. Rinke C, Schwientek P, Sczyrba A, Ivanova NN, Anderson IJ, et al. (2013) Insights into the phylogeny and coding potential of microbial dark matter. Nature 499: 431–437
  97. 97. Thamdrup B (2012) New pathways and processes in the global nitrogen cycle. Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst 43: 407–428
  98. 98. Gutierrez T, Green DH, Nichols PD, Whitman WB, Semple KT, et al. (2012) Polycyclovorans algicola gen. nov., sp. nov., an aromatic-hydrocarbon-degrading marine bacterium found associated with laboratory cultures of marine phytoplankton. Appl Environ Microbiol 79: 205–214
  99. 99. Baldi F, Marchetto D, Pini F, Fani R, Michaud L, et al. (2010) Biochemical and microbial features of shallow marine sediments along the Terra Nova Bay (Ross Sea, Antarctica). Continental Shelf Research 30: 1614–1625
  100. 100. Ward NL, Challacombe JF, Janssen PH, Henrissat B, Coutinho PM, et al. (2009) Three genomes from the phylum Acidobacteria provide insight into the lifestyles of these microorganisms in soils. Appl Environ Microbiol 75: 2046–2056
  101. 101. Fernández-Gómez B, Richter M, Schüler M, Pinhassi J, Acinas SG, et al. (2013) Ecology of marine Bacteroidetes: a comparative genomics approach. ISME J 7: 1026–1037
  102. 102. Fuerst JA, Sagulenko E (2011) Beyond the bacterium: planctomycetes challenge our concepts of microbial structure and function. Nat Rev Micro 9: 403–413
  103. 103. Tadonléké RD (2007) Strong coupling between natural Planctomycetes and changes in the quality of dissolved organic matter in freshwater samples. FEMS Microbiol Ecol 59: 543–555
  104. 104. Fukunaga Y, Kurahashi M, Sakiyama Y, Ohuchi M, Yokota A, et al. (2009) Phycisphaera mikurensis gen. nov., sp. nov., isolated from a marine alga, and proposal of Phycisphaeraceae fam. nov., Phycisphaerales ord. nov. and Phycisphaerae classis nov. in the phylum Planctomycetes. J Gen Appl Microbiol 55: 267–275.
  105. 105. Caro-Quintero A, Ritalahti KM, Cusick KD, Loffler FE, Konstantinidis KT (2012) The chimeric genome of Sphaerochaeta: nonspiral spirochetes that break with the prevalent dogma in spirochete biology. MBio 3. doi:10.1128/mBio.00025–12.
  106. 106. Subramani R, Aalbersberg W (2012) Marine actinomycetes: an ongoing source of novel bioactive metabolites. Microbiol Res 167: 571–580
  107. 107. Durbin AM, Teske A (2011) Microbial diversity and stratification of South Pacific abyssal marine sediments. Environ Microbiol 13: 3219–3234
  108. 108. Hamdan LJ, Coffin RB, Sikaroodi M, Greinert J, Treude T, et al. (2012) Ocean currents shape the microbiome of Arctic marine sediments. ISME J 7: 685–696
  109. 109. Janssen PH, Liesack W, Schink B (2002) Geovibrio thiophilus sp. nov., a novel sulfur-reducing bacterium belonging to the phylum Deferribacteres. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 52: 1341–1347
  110. 110. Takaki Y, Shimamura S, Nakagawa S, Fukuhara Y, Horikawa H, et al. (2010) Bacterial lifestyle in a deep-sea hydrothermal vent chimney revealed by the genome sequence of the thermophilic bacterium Deferribacter desulfuricans SSM1. DNA Research 17: 123–137
  111. 111. Gittel A, Kofoed MVW, Sørensen KB, Ingvorsen K, Schramm A (2012) Succession of Deferribacteres and Epsilonproteobacteria through a nitrate-treated high-temperature oil production facility. Systematic and Applied Microbiology 35: 165–174
  112. 112. DeBruyn JM, Nixon LT, Fawaz MN, Johnson AM, Radosevich M (2011) Global biogeography and quantitative seasonal dynamics of Gemmatimonadetes in soil. Appl Environ Microbiol 77: 6295–6300
  113. 113. Nemergut DR, Townsend AR, Sattin SR, Freeman KR, Fierer N, et al. (2008) The effects of chronic nitrogen fertilization on alpine tundra soil microbial communities: implications for carbon and nitrogen cycling. Environ Microbiol 10: 3093–3105
  114. 114. Kraigher B, Mandic-Mulec I (2011) Nitrification activity and community structure of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria in the bioreactors operated with addition of pharmaceuticals. J Hazard Mater 188: 78–84
  115. 115. Lücker S, Wagner M, Maixner F, Pelletier E, Koch H, et al. (2010) A Nitrospira metagenome illuminates the physiology and evolution of globally important nitrite-oxidizing bacteria. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 107: 13479–13484