The results of this study provide direct evidence for the quantitative significance of
Epsilonproteobacteria in dark CO
2 fixation in sulfidic areas of two marine redoxclines. In the sulfidic area of the Baltic Sea as well as the Black Sea redoxcline, cells taking up
14CO
2 were identified by MICRO-CARD-FISH as
Bacteria; more specifically, they were mainly composed of
Epsilonproteobacteria. In this study, the fraction of
14CO
2-assimilating
Bacteria in the Baltic Sea was two times higher than the highest corresponding percentage obtained for the Black Sea. Similarly, dark CO
2 fixation rates for the Baltic Sea were substantially higher than those determined for the Black Sea, albeit comparable to previously reported rates (
13,
18,
21,
37). The total abundance of
Epsilonproteobacteria in the Black Sea and, more specifically of group GD17 cells in the Gotland Deep, was consistent with previous CARD-FISH results, which showed high abundance and a wide depth distribution (
13,
24). Likewise, the layer with the highest abundance of CO
2-fixing cells was located in the sulfidic area, with a sulfide concentration of 8 to 10 μmol liter
−1 for both habitats. For the Baltic Sea, the number of cells taking up
14CO
2 generally agreed with the calculations of Jost et al. (
19), who estimated between 20 and 40% chemoautotrophic cells.
The importance of bacterial chemoautotrophic production, measured as dark CO
2 fixation, has been discussed for different marine redoxclines in relation to phototrophic primary production (
34,
39). Combining dark CO
2 fixation measurements with the number of
14CO
2-positive cells assessed by MICRO-CARD-FISH allows cell-specific dark CO
2 fixation rates to be estimated for chemoautotrophic cells, assuming CO
2 as the sole carbon source. The anaplerotic uptake of CO
2 by heterotrophic bacteria was considered to be insignificant for chemoautotrophic CO
2 fixation, as outlined by Jost et al. (
19) and Taylor et al. (
40). Based on these assumptions, cell-specific dark CO
2 fixation rates would amount to 61 to 217 fg of C cell
−1 day
−1 for the Baltic Sea redoxcline and 61 to 115 fg of C cell
−1 day
−1 for the Black Sea redoxcline. These rates are unrealistically high and also are not in line with the cell-specific CO
2 uptake rates of 10 to 25 fg of C cell
−1 day
−1 calculated for a Baltic Sea redoxcline by Jost et al. (
19) after flow-cytometric sorting of
14CO
2-labeled cell clusters. However, those authors based their calculation on a higher abundance of CO
2-fixing cells than was found in the present study by using MICRO-CARD-FISH. It is possible that the amount of
14CO
2-positive cells reported here was underestimated due to the detection limit of microautoradiography and to possible leakage of incorporated radioactivity during fixation and storage (
31). Furthermore, protists that were grazing on chemoautotrophic bacteria during incubation or were harboring chemoautotrophic ecto- and endosymbiotic bacteria could have reduced the amount of
14CO
2-positive cells visible after MICRO-CARD-FISH. It has been reported previously that the standard CARD-FISH procedure is destructive to protist cells (
29).
Chemoautotrophic
Archaea have recently been identified in mesopelagic waters of the North Atlantic (
15) and elsewhere (
16,
20). Almost all
14CO
2-positive cells in the dark CO
2 fixation maxima of the Baltic Sea and Black Sea redoxclines belonged to
Bacteria, precluding a major archaeal contribution to the chemoautotrophic community in the sulfidic areas of these redoxclines. As mentioned above, for the Baltic Sea, Glaubitz et al. (
10) investigated the incorporation of
13C into chemoautotrophic cells by rRNA-SIP. The authors could not identify autotrophic
Archaea; however, autotrophic activity of
Gammaproteobacteria in addition to that of
Epsilonproteobacteria, mostly belonging to group GD17, was shown. Consequently, for the Baltic Sea, it is likely that the remaining proportion of unidentified
14CO
2-fixing cells in the present study consisted, at least partly, of
Gammaproteobacteria. However, hybridizations with probe GAM42a (
28) did not detect chemoautotrophic cells in samples from the central Baltic Sea; however, this may have been due to sequence mismatch (our unpublished results) (
2).
Campbell et al. (
5) emphasized the potential role of
Epsilonproteobacteria for biogeochemical cycles, especially at the oxic-anoxic interfaces. For deep-sea hydrothermal fields, chemoautotrophic activity by
Epsilonproteobacteria has been demonstrated by different authors (
30,
32,
38). Lin et al. (
23,
24) showed elevated epsilonproteobacterial abundances but low epsilonproteobacterial
3H-leucine assimilation activity for the Cariaco Basin and proposed chemoautotrophic activity of
Epsilonproteobacteria there.
Epsilonproteobacteria constitute 75 to 100% of
14CO
2-assimilating
Bacteria in the layers of highest dark CO
2 fixation in this study, and they apparently contributed substantially to chemoautotrophic production in both the Black Sea and Baltic Sea redoxclines and can be regarded as key organisms for chemoautotrophic production. Therefore, the question arises as to whether or not
Epsilonproteobacteria are globally important chemoautotrophs in marine habitats where high dark CO
2 fixation rates around redoxclines have been measured.
Among
14CO
2-positive
Epsilonproteobacteria, members of the
Sulfurimonas subgroup GD17 were the dominant representatives in the sulfidic area of the Baltic Sea, in contrast to the rather low contribution of group GD17 to
Epsilonproteobacteria in the Black Sea. Grote et al. (
13) discussed the possible contribution of group GD17 to autotrophic activity, even though quantitative PCR data suggested a restricted high-activity zone of this group around the chemocline several meters above the dark CO
2 fixation maximum. However, the results of this study evidence the major contribution of group GD17 to dark CO
2 fixation in the sulfidic area of the Baltic Sea. Still, the prevailing metabolism for chemoautotrophy in marine sulfidic areas is unknown, and the availability of electron acceptors for chemoautotrophy has been discussed by several authors previously (
13,
18,
40). Dark CO
2 fixation driven by autotrophic denitrification with reduced sulfur compounds as electron donors is unlikely, since there was no evidence for a clear overlap between nitrate and hydrogen sulfide. The oxidation of reduced sulfur species combined with the reduction of particulate metal oxides might be possible in the Baltic Sea and in the Black Sea (
18,
19). Members of group GD17 were initially regarded as sulfur-oxidizing denitrifiers, but the remaining high cell numbers in sulfidic nitrate-deprived waters suggested a possible metabolic versatility for this group (
4,
13). Notably, the percentage of
14CO
2-assimilating epsilonproteobacterial cells in layers with the highest dark CO
2 fixation rates never exceeded 65% of total
Epsilonproteobacteria, leaving 35% of the cells either metabolically inactive or heterotrophic. As mentioned above, Lin et al. (
23) detected a significant number of heterotrophic
Epsilonproteobacteria in the Cariaco Basin. These findings stress the potential for heterotrophic as well as autotrophic activity within the
Epsilonproteobacteria at marine redoxclines. Moreover, considering the Baltic Sea redoxcline, with group GD17 as the dominant epsilonproteobacterial representative, it is likely that group GD17 is metabolically versatile, exhibiting chemoautotrophy and, potentially, heterotrophy. The ability of members of group GD17 to switch between heterotrophic and autotrophic metabolism could also explain its wide depth distribution, from the suboxic to the sulfidic layers, as reported by Grote et al. (
13).
In conclusion, even though the entire ecophysiological capacity and metabolism of these
Epsilonproteobacteria are not fully understood yet, this study demonstrates the major role of these bacteria in chemoautotrophic production in the sulfidic areas of redoxclines of the central Baltic Sea and Black Sea. Together with the results of Glaubitz et al. (
10), who reported the transfer of chemoautotrophic production to the microeukaryotic community, our findings underline the importance of
Epsilonproteobacteria for these habitats. Further studies in other sulfidic areas exhibiting high dark CO
2 fixation rates will show whether
Epsilonproteobacteria are also key players in inorganic carbon fixation in similar specific aquatic habitats worldwide.