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. 1987 Oct;53(10):2368–2372. doi: 10.1128/aem.53.10.2368-2372.1987

Microbial Growth Rates and Biomass Production in a Marine Sediment: Evidence for a Very Active but Mostly Nongrowing Community

James A Novitsky 1
PMCID: PMC204114  PMID: 16347457

Abstract

Biomass, nucleic acid synthesis, and specific growth rates of the microbial communities were measured throughout a vertical profile of a coastal marine sediment. The microbial biomass, as determined by ATP concentrations, in the sediment-water interface was over twice that measured in the other horizons of a 10-cm profile. Likewise, biomass carbon production, as determined by DNA synthesis, and the specific growth rate, as determined from the kinetics of [3H]ATP pool labeling, were also elevated at the interface. These results indicate that, due to a large and active community in the interface, the greatest amount of microbial activity, growth, and biosynthesis occurs within the first few millimeters of sediment. These results notwithstanding, a combination of two independent techniques established that over 90% of the sediment-water interface community was not actively growing.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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