Abstract

Prokaryotic heterotrophs (hereafter, bacteria) represent a large proportion of global biomass, and therefore bacterial biomass stoichiometry likely exerts control on global phosphorus (P), carbon (C), and nitrogen cycling and primary productivity. In this study we grew recently isolated freshwater heterotrophic bacteria across an ecologically relevant range of resource C:P ratios (organic C to P ratio in available resources) to quantify the P requirements of these organisms and examine the degree to which they regulated their P content under P-sufficient and P-deficient conditions. Bacterial biomass was only limited by P when resource C:P was greater than 250 (by atoms). Bacterial C:P ranged from 71 to 174 under P sufficiency and from 252 to 548 under P deficiency. Bacteria exhibited very little C:P homeostasis under P-sufficient growth conditions, greater C:P homeostasis under P-deficient conditions, and the ability of bacteria to outcompete one another in short-term experiments depended on a tradeoff between storing excess P for later use under P-deficient conditions or immediately using P to produce more biomass. These results indicate that freshwater heterotrophic bacteria are not as P-rich as previously thought and that homeostatic regulation of C:P stoichiometry depends on the individual taxa and what resource (organic C or available P) is limiting bacterial growth. Individual bacterial populations can vary between strong C:P homeostasis under P deficiency to virtually no C:P homeostasis under P sufficiency, but variation between taxa and the effect this has on competitive ability may dampen the signal in C:PB at the bacterial community level. Nevertheless, the prevalence of homeostatic and non-homeostatic strategies in a bacterial community should have important implications for nutrient regeneration and carbon cycling.

Highlights

  • Prokaryotic heterotrophs can influence the availability of phosphorus (P) in soils, lakes, and oceans (Cotner and Biddanda, 2002; van der Heijden et al, 2008), which effectively controls primary production in many ecosystems (Elser et al, 2007)

  • Competitive P uptake and immobilization by bacteria should only occur during P-deficient growth, when the organic carbon (C) to P ratio in the available resources (C:PR) is greater than the C:P required for bacterial biomass (C:PB)

  • Weak homeostatic regulation of C:PB by bacteria would result in more biomass production per unit P during P deficiency, allowing bacteria to maintain a relatively high BGE, but during P sufficiency growth efficiency would decrease due to a low C:PB

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Summary

Introduction

Prokaryotic heterotrophs (hereafter, bacteria) can influence the availability of phosphorus (P) in soils, lakes, and oceans (Cotner and Biddanda, 2002; van der Heijden et al, 2008), which effectively controls primary production in many ecosystems (Elser et al, 2007). Competitive P uptake and immobilization by bacteria should only occur during P-deficient growth, when the organic carbon (C) to P ratio in the available resources (C:PR) is greater than the C:P required for bacterial biomass (C:PB).

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