Institut for Biologi

Aarhus Universitets segl

Niels Peter Revsbech

In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningpeer review

Standard

In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor. / Marzocchi, Ugo; Revsbech, Niels Peter; Glud, Ronnie.

2011. Abstract fra 2010 Ocean Sciences Meeting (AGU/ASLO/TOS), Portland, USA.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningpeer review

Harvard

Marzocchi, U, Revsbech, NP & Glud, R 2011, 'In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor', 2010 Ocean Sciences Meeting (AGU/ASLO/TOS), Portland, USA, 24/02/2010 - 24/02/2010.

APA

Marzocchi, U., Revsbech, N. P., & Glud, R. (2011). In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor. Abstract fra 2010 Ocean Sciences Meeting (AGU/ASLO/TOS), Portland, USA.

CBE

Marzocchi U, Revsbech NP, Glud R. 2011. In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor. Abstract fra 2010 Ocean Sciences Meeting (AGU/ASLO/TOS), Portland, USA.

MLA

Marzocchi, Ugo, Niels Peter Revsbech og Ronnie Glud In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor. 2010 Ocean Sciences Meeting (AGU/ASLO/TOS), 24 feb. 2010, Portland, USA, Konferenceabstrakt til konference, 2011.

Vancouver

Marzocchi U, Revsbech NP, Glud R. In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor. 2011. Abstract fra 2010 Ocean Sciences Meeting (AGU/ASLO/TOS), Portland, USA.

Author

Marzocchi, Ugo ; Revsbech, Niels Peter ; Glud, Ronnie. / In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor. Abstract fra 2010 Ocean Sciences Meeting (AGU/ASLO/TOS), Portland, USA.

Bibtex

@conference{c815a0ac44be437d86b584bb4d8d8a44,
title = "In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor",
abstract = "When a bacteria-based nitrate biosensor with tip diameter down to 20 µm was invented about 12 years ago it became possible to measure detailed nitrate profiles in marine sediments, but functional tip membranes in the sensors were difficult to make, and the sensors did not work at temperatures below about 8°C. Large resources are being spent on exploration of the deep sea using sensor-equipped benthic landers, and it would be of significant value to add nitrate to the array of chemical sensors for in situ use, but it is then necessary to construct more robust sensors that work at temperatures around 2°C. By isolation of psychrotrophic nitrate-reducing and N2O producing bacteria from arctic environments and by application of a new procedure for making microscale ion-permeable membranes we have now succeeded in making biosensors that function reproducibly at low temperatures. It has thus been possible to analyze detailed nitrate microprofiles with < 1 µM resolution in sediments off the Japanese coast at 1500 m water depth where the temperature was 2.5°C. Many of the profiles exhibited near-surface nitrate peaks due to nitrification, and subsequent nitrate consumption due to nitrate respiration in anoxic layers led to total depletion at 10-15 mm depth. A result from comparison of shallow (75 m) water sediment profiles recorded both in situ and on recovered sediment cores is that there was more variability in situ than in the laboratory, probably due to decreased animal activity during laboratory conditions. It is difficult to work strictly aseptically when producing the sensors, and there is thus a risk that the bacterial culture may be contaminated with N2O reducing bacteria that will make the sensor insensitive to nitrate. However, when used continuously at room temperature they usually work well for several days, and the shelf-life is up to several weeks if they are stored at 4-6°C.",
keywords = "biogeochemistry",
author = "Ugo Marzocchi and Revsbech, {Niels Peter} and Ronnie Glud",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 24-02-2010 Through 24-02-2010",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - In situ measurement of nitrate in deep-sea sediments with a microscale biosensor

AU - Marzocchi, Ugo

AU - Revsbech, Niels Peter

AU - Glud, Ronnie

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - When a bacteria-based nitrate biosensor with tip diameter down to 20 µm was invented about 12 years ago it became possible to measure detailed nitrate profiles in marine sediments, but functional tip membranes in the sensors were difficult to make, and the sensors did not work at temperatures below about 8°C. Large resources are being spent on exploration of the deep sea using sensor-equipped benthic landers, and it would be of significant value to add nitrate to the array of chemical sensors for in situ use, but it is then necessary to construct more robust sensors that work at temperatures around 2°C. By isolation of psychrotrophic nitrate-reducing and N2O producing bacteria from arctic environments and by application of a new procedure for making microscale ion-permeable membranes we have now succeeded in making biosensors that function reproducibly at low temperatures. It has thus been possible to analyze detailed nitrate microprofiles with < 1 µM resolution in sediments off the Japanese coast at 1500 m water depth where the temperature was 2.5°C. Many of the profiles exhibited near-surface nitrate peaks due to nitrification, and subsequent nitrate consumption due to nitrate respiration in anoxic layers led to total depletion at 10-15 mm depth. A result from comparison of shallow (75 m) water sediment profiles recorded both in situ and on recovered sediment cores is that there was more variability in situ than in the laboratory, probably due to decreased animal activity during laboratory conditions. It is difficult to work strictly aseptically when producing the sensors, and there is thus a risk that the bacterial culture may be contaminated with N2O reducing bacteria that will make the sensor insensitive to nitrate. However, when used continuously at room temperature they usually work well for several days, and the shelf-life is up to several weeks if they are stored at 4-6°C.

AB - When a bacteria-based nitrate biosensor with tip diameter down to 20 µm was invented about 12 years ago it became possible to measure detailed nitrate profiles in marine sediments, but functional tip membranes in the sensors were difficult to make, and the sensors did not work at temperatures below about 8°C. Large resources are being spent on exploration of the deep sea using sensor-equipped benthic landers, and it would be of significant value to add nitrate to the array of chemical sensors for in situ use, but it is then necessary to construct more robust sensors that work at temperatures around 2°C. By isolation of psychrotrophic nitrate-reducing and N2O producing bacteria from arctic environments and by application of a new procedure for making microscale ion-permeable membranes we have now succeeded in making biosensors that function reproducibly at low temperatures. It has thus been possible to analyze detailed nitrate microprofiles with < 1 µM resolution in sediments off the Japanese coast at 1500 m water depth where the temperature was 2.5°C. Many of the profiles exhibited near-surface nitrate peaks due to nitrification, and subsequent nitrate consumption due to nitrate respiration in anoxic layers led to total depletion at 10-15 mm depth. A result from comparison of shallow (75 m) water sediment profiles recorded both in situ and on recovered sediment cores is that there was more variability in situ than in the laboratory, probably due to decreased animal activity during laboratory conditions. It is difficult to work strictly aseptically when producing the sensors, and there is thus a risk that the bacterial culture may be contaminated with N2O reducing bacteria that will make the sensor insensitive to nitrate. However, when used continuously at room temperature they usually work well for several days, and the shelf-life is up to several weeks if they are stored at 4-6°C.

KW - biogeochemistry

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 24 February 2010 through 24 February 2010

ER -