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Sulphur sources for chemoautotrophic nutrition of shallow water vestimentiferan tubeworms in Kagoshima Bay
Miura, T.; Nedachi, M.; Hashimoto, J. (2002). Sulphur sources for chemoautotrophic nutrition of shallow water vestimentiferan tubeworms in Kagoshima Bay. J. Mar. Biol. Ass. U.K. 82(4): 537-540
In: Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. Cambridge University Press/Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom: Cambridge. ISSN 0025-3154; e-ISSN 1469-7769, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Chemical elements > Nonmetals > Sulphur
    Tropism > Chemotropism
    Water > Shallow water
    Lamellibrachia satsuma Miura, 1997 [WoRMS]
    INW, Japan, Kyushu, Kagoshima Prefect., Kagoshima
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Miura, T.
  • Nedachi, M.
  • Hashimoto, J.

Abstract
    To elucidate the sulphur sources for chemoautotrophy by the symbiotic bacteria of a vestimentiferan tubeworm, Lamellibrachia satsuma, living in Kagoshima Bay at depths of 80-100 m, we analysed the sulphur isotopic ratios of the animal tissues and compared them with environmental sulphur species collected in the field. Animals that had been maintained in an aquarium for over a year and supplied a known sulphur source were also investigated. The gas emitted from volcanic source in Kagoshima Bay contained rather heavy sulphide (+12.7 to +22.9‰ delta34S) compared with deep-sea hydrothermal vent systems (0 to +5‰). The tissue of the tubeworms contained very light sulphide (-21.5 to -25.9‰). It is inferred from the analysis of the aquarium-maintained specimens that the fractionation by the tubeworm or its symbiont was <1.5‰. The sulphur source assimilated by the tubeworms in the field is therefore inferred to have delta34S -19.1 to -24.6‰. This means that only 9.7 to 25.0% of the sulphur in the worm tissues can be derived from the volcanic gas and the rest must come from other sources, such as microbial activity in the bottom sediment.

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