Data di Pubblicazione:
2014
Abstract:
In the present study, biomass development and changes in community composition of phototrophic biofilms grown under
different controlled ambient conditions (light, temperature and flow) were examined. Source communities were taken from a
wastewater treatment plant and used to inoculate growth surfaces in a semi-continuous-flow microcosm. We recorded biofilm
growth curves in cultures over a period of 30 days across 12 experiments. Biovolume of phototrophs and community composition
for taxonomic shifts were also obtained using light and electron microscopy. Species richness in the cultured biofilms was greatly
reduced with respect to the natural samples, and diversity decreased even further during biofilm development. Diadesmis
confervacea, Phormidium spp., Scenedesmus spp. and Synechocystis spp. were identified as key taxa in the microcosm. While a
significant positive effect of irradiance on biofilm growth could be identified, impacts of temperature and flow rate on biofilm
development and diversity were less evident. We discuss the hypothesis that biofilm development could have been subject to
multistability, i.e. the existence of several possible stable biofilm configurations for the same set of environmental parameters;
small variations in the species composition might have been sufficient to switch between these different configurations and thus
have contributed to overwriting the original effects of temperature and flow velocity.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
diversity; flow; light; microcosm; multistability; phototrophic biofilms; temperature; variability
Elenco autori:
DI PIPPO, Francesca
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