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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Romera-Castillo is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Romera-Castillo.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Net Production and Consumption of Fluorescent Colored Dissolved Organic Matter by Natural Bacterial Assemblages Growing on Marine Phytoplankton Exudates

Cristina Romera-Castillo; Hugo Sarmento; Xosé Antón Álvarez-Salgado; Josep M. Gasol; Cèlia Marrasé

ABSTRACT An understanding of the distribution of colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM) in the oceans and its role in the global carbon cycle requires a better knowledge of the colored materials produced and consumed by marine phytoplankton and bacteria. In this work, we examined the net uptake and release of CDOM by a natural bacterial community growing on DOM derived from four phytoplankton species cultured under axenic conditions. Fluorescent humic-like substances exuded by phytoplankton (excitation/emission [Ex/Em] wavelength, 310 nm/392 nm; Cobles peak M) were utilized by bacteria in different proportions depending on the phytoplankton species of origin. Furthermore, bacteria produced humic-like substances that fluoresce at an Ex/Em wavelength of 340 nm/440 nm (Cobles peak C). Differences were also observed in the Ex/Em wavelengths of the protein-like materials (Cobles peak T) produced by phytoplankton and bacteria. The induced fluorescent emission of CDOM produced by prokaryotes was an order of magnitude higher than that of CDOM produced by eukaryotes. We have also examined the final compositions of the bacterial communities growing on the exudates, which differed markedly depending on the phytoplankton species of origin. Alteromonas and Roseobacter were dominant during all the incubations on Chaetoceros sp. and Prorocentrum minimum exudates, respectively. Alteromonas was the dominant group growing on Skeletonema costatum exudates during the exponential growth phase, but it was replaced by Roseobacter afterwards. On Micromonas pusilla exudates, Roseobacter was replaced by Bacteroidetes after the exponential growth phase. Our work shows that fluorescence excitation-emission matrices of CDOM can be a helpful tool for the identification of microbial sources of DOM in the marine environment, but further studies are necessary to explore the association of particular bacterial groups with specific fluorophores.


Nature Communications | 2015

Turnover time of fluorescent dissolved organic matter in the dark global ocean

Teresa S. Catalá; Isabel Reche; A. Fuentes-Lema; Cristina Romera-Castillo; Mar Nieto-Cid; E. Ortega-Retuerta; Eva María Calvo; Colin A. Stedmon

Marine dissolved organic matter (DOM) is one of the largest reservoirs of reduced carbon on Earth. In the dark ocean (>200 m), most of this carbon is refractory DOM. This refractory DOM, largely produced during microbial mineralization of organic matter, includes humic-like substances generated in situ and detectable by fluorescence spectroscopy. Here we show two ubiquitous humic-like fluorophores with turnover times of 435±41 and 610±55 years, which persist significantly longer than the ~350 years that the dark global ocean takes to renew. In parallel, decay of a tyrosine-like fluorophore with a turnover time of 379±103 years is also detected. We propose the use of DOM fluorescence to study the cycling of resistant DOM that is preserved at centennial timescales and could represent a mechanism of carbon sequestration (humic-like fraction) and the decaying DOM injected into the dark global ocean, where it decreases at centennial timescales (tyrosine-like fraction).


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2015

Water mass age and aging driving chromophoric dissolved organic matter in the dark global ocean

Teresa S. Catalá; Isabel Reche; Marta Álvarez; S. Khatiwala; Elisa F. Guallart; V. M. Benítez-Barrios; A. Fuentes-Lema; Cristina Romera-Castillo; Mar Nieto-Cid; Carles Pelejero; E. Fraile-Nuez; E. Ortega-Retuerta; Cèlia Marrasé; Xosé Antón Álvarez-Salgado

The omnipresence of chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) in the open ocean enables its use as a tracer for biochemical processes throughout the global overturning circulation. We made an inventory of CDOM optical properties, ideal water age (τ), and apparent oxygen utilization (AOU) along the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Ocean waters sampled during the Malaspina 2010 expedition. A water mass analysis was applied to obtain intrinsic, hereinafter archetypal, values of τ, AOU, oxygen utilization rate (OUR), and CDOM absorption coefficients, spectral slopes and quantum yield for each one of the 22 water types intercepted during this circumnavigation. Archetypal values of AOU and OUR have been used to trace the differential influence of water mass aging and aging rates, respectively, on CDOM variables. Whereas the absorption coefficient at 325 nm (a325) and the fluorescence quantum yield at 340 nm (Φ340) increased, the spectral slope over the wavelength range 275–295 nm (S275–295) and the ratio of spectral slopes over the ranges 275–295 nm and 350–400 nm (SR) decreased significantly with water mass aging (AOU). Combination of the slope of the linear regression between archetypal AOU and a325 with the estimated global OUR allowed us to obtain a CDOM turnover time of 634 ± 120 years, which exceeds the flushing time of the dark ocean (>200 m) by 46%. This positive relationship supports the assumption of in situ production and accumulation of CDOM as a by-product of microbial metabolism as water masses turn older. Furthermore, our data evidence that global-scale CDOM quantity (a325) is more dependent on aging (AOU), whereas CDOM quality (S275–295, SR, Φ340) is more dependent on aging rate (OUR).


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Predicting Reactive Intermediate Quantum Yields from Dissolved Organic Matter Photolysis Using Optical Properties and Antioxidant Capacity

Garrett McKay; Wenxi Huang; Cristina Romera-Castillo; Jenna E. Crouch; Fernando L. Rosario-Ortiz; Rudolf Jaffé

The antioxidant capacity and formation of photochemically produced reactive intermediates (RI) was studied for water samples collected from the Florida Everglades with different spatial (marsh versus estuarine) and temporal (wet versus dry season) characteristics. Measured RI included triplet excited states of dissolved organic matter (3DOM*), singlet oxygen (1O2), and the hydroxyl radical (•OH). Single and multiple linear regression modeling were performed using a broad range of extrinsic (to predict RI formation rates, RRI) and intrinsic (to predict RI quantum yields, ΦRI) parameters. Multiple linear regression models consistently led to better predictions of RRI and ΦRI for our data set but poor prediction of ΦRI for a previously published data set,1 probably because the predictors are intercorrelated (Pearsons r > 0.5). Single linear regression models were built with data compiled from previously published studies (n ≈ 120) in which E2:E3, S, and ΦRI values were measured, which revealed a high degree of similarity between RI-optical property relationships across DOM samples of diverse sources. This study reveals that •OH formation is, in general, decoupled from 3DOM* and 1O2 formation, providing supporting evidence that 3DOM* is not a •OH precursor. Finally, ΦRI for 1O2 and 3DOM* correlated negatively with antioxidant activity (a surrogate for electron donating capacity) for the collected samples, which is consistent with intramolecular oxidation of DOM moieties by 3DOM*.


Nature Communications | 2016

Corrigendum: Turnover time of fluorescent dissolved organic matter in the dark global ocean

Teresa S. Catalá; Isabel Reche; A. Fuentes-Lema; Cristina Romera-Castillo; Mar Nieto-Cid; E. Ortega-Retuerta; Eva María Calvo; Marta Álvarez; Cèlia Marrasé; Colin A. Stedmon; X. Antón Álvarez-Salgado

Corrigendum: Turnover time of fluorescent dissolved organic matter in the dark global ocean


Limnology and Oceanography | 2010

Production of chromophoric dissolved organic matter by marine phytoplankton

Cristina Romera-Castillo; Hugo Sarmento; Xosé Antón Álvarez-Salgado; Josep M. Gasol; Cèlia Marrasé


Journal of Plankton Research | 2010

Effects of a dust deposition event on coastal marine microbial abundance and activity, bacterial community structure and ecosystem function

Itziar Lekunberri; Thomas Lefort; Estela Romero; Evaristo Vázquez-Domínguez; Cristina Romera-Castillo; Cèlia Marrasé; Francesc Peters; Markus Weinbauer; Josep M. Gasol


Limnology and Oceanography | 2013

Phytoplankton species-specific release of dissolved free amino acids and their selective consumption by bacteria

Hugo Sarmento; Cristina Romera-Castillo; Markus V. Lindh; Jarone Pinhassi; M. Montserrat Sala; Josep M. Gasol; Cèlia Marrasé; Gordon T. Taylor


Limnology and Oceanography | 2013

Spectral irradiance dependence of sunlight effects on plankton dimethylsulfide production

Martí Galí; Clara Ruiz-González; Thomas Lefort; Josep M. Gasol; Clara Cardelús; Cristina Romera-Castillo; Rafel Simó


Marine Chemistry | 2011

Fluorescence: Absorption coefficient ratio — Tracing photochemical and microbial degradation processes affecting coloured dissolved organic matter in a coastal system

Cristina Romera-Castillo; Mar Nieto-Cid; Carmen G. Castro; Cèlia Marrasé; John L. Largier; Eric D. Barton; Xosé Antón Álvarez-Salgado

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Cèlia Marrasé

Spanish National Research Council

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Mar Nieto-Cid

Spanish National Research Council

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Josep M. Gasol

Spanish National Research Council

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E. Ortega-Retuerta

Spanish National Research Council

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Marta Álvarez

Spanish National Research Council

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Colin A. Stedmon

Technical University of Denmark

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