Publication Date:
2004
abstract:
We examined the influence of small-scale turbulence and
its associated shear on bacterioplankton abundance and
cell size. We incubated natural microbial assemblages and
bacteria-only fractions and subjected them to treatments
with turbulence and additions of mineral nutrients and/
or organic carbon. Bacterial abundance was not affected
directly by turbulence in bacteria-only incubations. In
natural microbial assemblage incubations, bacterial concentrations
were higher under turbulence than in stillwater
controls when nutrients were added. In general, in
the turbulence treatments bacteria increased significantly
in size, mainly due to elongation of cells. The addition of
inorganic nutrients had a negative effect on bacterial size,
but a significantly positive effect on abundance independently
of other factors such as turbulence and the
presence of predators. Flagellate grazing did not trigger
an increase in bacterial size as a grazing resistance response
in unmixed containers. With the addition of organic
carbon, bacteria elongated and partly settled to the
bottom of the containers, in both the turbulent and still
treatment, but bacterial abundance did not further increase.
Furthermore, bacteria aggregated in the turbulence
treatments after the second day of incubation even
in the absence of other components of the microbial
community. We found that turbulence and the associated
shear increase bacterial size and change bacterial morphology,
at least under certain nutrient conditions. This
might be due to a physiological response (enhanced
growth rate and/or unbalanced growth) or due to the
selection of opportunistic strains when organic carbon is
in excess compared to mineral nutrients. We suggest that
shear associated with turbulent flow enhances the DOM
flux to bacteria directly as well as indirectly through
enhanced grazing activity and photosynthetic release. The
formation of bacterial aggregates and filaments under
turbulence might give selective advantage to bacteria in
terms of nutrient uptake and grazing resistance.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
bacterioplankton; cell size; grazing; turbulence; seawater
List of contributors:
Zoppini, Annamaria
Published in: