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Featured researches published by Ingeborg Bussmann.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2001

Factors influencing the cultivability of lake water bacteria

Ingeborg Bussmann; Bodo Philipp; Bernhard Schink

Counting bacteria in natural water samples by cultivation yields only low recovery efficiencies (ca. 1%), compared to total counts obtained after 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindol (DAPI) staining. In order to optimize the cultivation of heterotrophic planktonic bacteria from Lake Constance (Germany), selected parameters of the medium composition were modified. The most important factor was the concentration of organic substrate (nutrient broth plus yeast extract), which significantly influenced the most probable number obtained in liquid growth medium. Reduced oxygen concentrations (3-12%) lowered the most probable number. Addition of N-acyl homoserine lactones to the medium increased the cultivability slightly. Low substrate concentrations [0.03-0.06% (w/v)], an incubation atmosphere of 21% oxygen at 16 degrees C for 4 weeks were optimal and increased the cultivability (most probable number related to total bacterial counts) to an average cultivability of 18+/-11%, (n=8). The results indicate that cultivabilities of heterotrophic bacteria from lakewater samples can be significantly increased by modifying the cultivation methods.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2004

Preferential cultivation of type II methanotrophic bacteria from littoral sediments (Lake Constance)

Ingeborg Bussmann; Michael Pester; Andreas Brune; Bernhard Schink

Most widely used medium for cultivation of methanotrophic bacteria from various environments is that proposed in 1970 by Whittenbury. In order to adapt and optimize medium for culturing of methanotrophs from freshwater sediment, media with varying concentrations of substrates, phosphate, nitrate, and other mineral salts were used to enumerate methanotrophs by the most probable number method. High concentrations (>1 mM) of magnesium and sulfate, and high concentrations of nitrate (>500 microM) significantly reduced the number of cultured methanotrophs, whereas phosphate in the range of 15-1500 microM had no influence. Also oxygen and carbon dioxide influenced the culturing efficiency, with an optimal mixing ratio of 17% O(2) and 3% CO(2); the mixing ratio of methane (6-32%) had no effect. A clone library of pmoA genes amplified by PCR from DNA extracted from sediment revealed the presence of both type I and type II methanotrophs. Nonetheless, the cultivation of methanotrophs, also with the improved medium, clearly favored growth of type II methanotrophs of the Methylosinus/Methylocystis group. Although significantly more methanotrophs could be cultured with the modified medium, their diversity did not mirror the diversity of methanotrophs in the sediment sample detected by molecular biology method.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2006

Cultivation of methanotrophic bacteria in opposing gradients of methane and oxygen

Ingeborg Bussmann; Monali Rahalkar; Bernhard Schink

In sediments, methane-oxidizing bacteria live in opposing gradients of methane and oxygen. In such a gradient system, the fluxes of methane and oxygen are controlled by diffusion and consumption rates, and the rate-limiting substrate is maintained at a minimum concentration at the layer of consumption. Opposing gradients of methane and oxygen were mimicked in a specific cultivation set-up in which growth of methanotrophic bacteria occurred as a sharp band at either c. 5 or 20 mm below the air-exposed end. Two new strains of methanotrophic bacteria were isolated with this system. One isolate, strain LC 1, belonged to the Methylomonas genus (type I methantroph) and contained soluble methane mono-oxygenase. Another isolate, strain LC 2, was related to the Methylobacter group (type I methantroph), as determined by 16S rRNA gene and pmoA sequence similarities. However, the partial pmoA sequence was only 86% related to cultured Methylobacter species. This strain accumulated significant amounts of formaldehyde in conventional cultivation with methane and oxygen, which may explain why it is preferentially enriched in a gradient cultivation system.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2016

Methane turnover and methanotrophic communities in arctic aquatic ecosystems of the Lena Delta, Northeast Siberia

Roman Osudar; Susanne Liebner; Mashal Alawi; Sizhong Yang; Ingeborg Bussmann; Dirk Wagner

Large amounts of organic carbon are stored in Arctic permafrost environments, and microbial activity can potentially mineralize this carbon into methane, a potent greenhouse gas. In this study, we assessed the methane budget, the bacterial methane oxidation (MOX) and the underlying environmental controls of arctic lake systems, which represent substantial sources of methane. Five lake systems located on Samoylov Island (Lena Delta, Siberia) and the connected river sites were analyzed using radiotracers to estimate the MOX rates, and molecular biology methods to characterize the abundance and the community composition of methane-oxidizing bacteria (MOB). In contrast to the river, the lake systems had high variation in the methane concentrations, the abundance and composition of the MOB communities, and consequently, the MOX rates. The highest methane concentrations and the highest MOX rates were detected in the lake outlets and in a lake complex in a flood plain area. Though, in all aquatic systems, we detected both, Type I and II MOB, in lake systems, we observed a higher diversity including MOB, typical of the soil environments. The inoculation of soil MOB into the aquatic systems, resulting from permafrost thawing, might be an additional factor controlling the MOB community composition and potentially methanotrophic capacity.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2016

Methane release from sediment seeps to the atmosphere is counteracted by highly active Methylococcaceae in the water column of deep oligotrophic Lake Constance

Maren Bornemann; Ingeborg Bussmann; Lucas Tichy; Jörg S. Deutzmann; Bernhard Schink; Michael Pester

Methane emissions from freshwater environments contribute substantially to global warming but are under strong control of aerobic methane-oxidizing bacteria. Recently discovered methane seeps (pockmarks) in freshwater lake sediments have the potential to bypass this control by their strong outgassing activity. Whether this is counteracted by pelagic methanotrophs is not well understood yet. We used a (3)H-CH4-radiotracer technique and pmoA-based molecular approaches to assess the activity, abundance and community structure of pelagic methanotrophs above active pockmarks in deep oligotrophic Lake Constance. Above profundal pockmarks, methane oxidation rates (up to 458 nmol CH4xa0l(-1)xa0d(-1)) exceeded those of the surrounding water column by two orders of magnitude and coincided with maximum methanotroph abundances of 0.6% of the microbial community. Phylogenetic analysis indicated a dominance of members of the Methylococcaceae in the water column of both, pockmark and reference sites, with most of the retrieved sequences being associated with a water-column specific clade. Communities at pockmark and reference locations also differed in parts, which was likely caused by entrainment of sediment-hosted methanotrophs at pockmark sites. Our results show that the release of seep-derived methane to the atmosphere is counteracted by a distinct methanotrophic community with a pronounced activity throughout bottom waters.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2007

Methylosoma difficile gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel methanotroph enriched by gradient cultivation from littoral sediment of Lake Constance

Monali Rahalkar; Ingeborg Bussmann; Bernhard Schink


Limnology and Oceanography-methods | 2015

Assessment of the radio 3H-CH4 tracer technique to measure aerobic methane oxidation in the water column

Ingeborg Bussmann; Anna Matousu; Roman Osudar; Susan Mau


Limnology and Oceanography-methods | 2006

A modified diffusion-based methane sensor and its application in freshwater sediment

Ingeborg Bussmann; Bernhard Schink


Aquatic Microbial Ecology | 2017

Effect of salinity on microbial methane oxidation in freshwater and marine environments

Roman Osudar; Karl-Walter Klings; Dirk Wagner; Ingeborg Bussmann


Alfred Wegener Institute - Biological Institute Helgoland | 2014

Methane concentrations and methane oxidation rates from Oct 2010 - March 2012 in the Elbe Estuary, from Hamburg to Cuxhaven, Germany

Ingeborg Bussmann; Roman Osudar; Anna Matousu

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Dirk Wagner

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Sizhong Yang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Alexandra Kraberg

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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