A transect from the Tomoe River Mouth through Shimizu Port to Suruga Bay, Japan, was examined between 2005 and 2009 to reveal the population dynamics of Crenarchaeota and Euryarchaeota in an estuary environment. Crenarchaeota tended to increase in abundance in waters deeper than 100 m compared with Euryarchaeota, and comprised 11% of total direct counts. Archaeal abundance was highest in the Tomoe River Mouth, with a strong negative correlation between surface euryarchaeal abundance and salinity (P<0.001). The diversity index for the phylotypic archaeal community in the mouth was three times higher than that at sites St1-1m and St1-10m in the estuary, and OTUs represented most of the OTU groups at the sites. Three of the seven total OTUs, which comprised 83.6% of the 140 sequenced clones in the estuary, were related to the OTUs in the mouth with similarities higher than 97%. A significant proportion of the archaeal community appears to be derived from the Tomoe River. The two dominant phylotypes of the archaeal community in Shimizu Port, belonging to MGI and MGII, occurred ubiquitously.
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