Document of bibliographic reference 61259

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Strong, weak and missing links in a planktonic microbial community
Abstract
Planktonic microbial communities often appear stable over periods of days and thus tight links are assumed to exist between differentfunctional groups (i.e. producers and consumers). We examined these links by characterizing short-term temporal correspondences in theconcentrations and activities of microbial groups sampled from 1 m depth, at a coastal site of the N.W. Mediterranean Sea, in September2001 every 3 h for 3 days. We estimated the abundance and activity rates of the autotrophic prokaryote Synechococcus, heterotrophicbacteria, viruses, heterotrophic nanoflagellates, as well as dissolved organic carbon concentrations. We found that Synechococcus,heterotrophic bacteria, and viruses displayed distinct patterns. Synechococcus abundance was greatest at midnight and lowest at 21:00 andshowed the common pattern of an early evening maximum in dividing cells. In contrast, viral concentrations were minimal at midnightand maximal at 18:00. Viral infection of heterotrophic bacteria was rare (0.5^2.5%) and appeared to peak at 03:00. Heterotrophicbacteria, as % eubacteria-positive cells, peaked at midday, appearing loosely related to relative changes in dissolved organic carbonconcentration. Bacterial production as assessed by leucine incorporation showed no consistent temporal pattern but could be related toshifts in the grazing rates of heterotrophic nanoflagellates and viral infection rates. Estimates of virus-induced mortality of heterotrophicbacteria, based on infection frequencies, were only about 10% of cell production. Overall, the dynamics of viruses appeared more closelyrelated to Synechococcus than to heterotrophic bacteria. Thus, we found weak links between dissolved organic carbon concentration, orgrazing, and bacterial activity, a possibly strong link between Synechococcus and viruses, and a missing link between light and viruses.
Bibliographic citation
Betteral, Y.; Dolan, J.R.; Hornac, K.; Lemée, R.; Masin, M.; Pedrotti, M.-L.; Rochelle-Newall, E.; Simek, K.; Sime-Ngando, T. (2002). Strong, weak and missing links in a planktonic microbial community. FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 42: 451-462
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
author
Name
John Richard Dolan
author
author
author
author
author
Name
Emma Rochelle-Newall
author
Name
Karel Simek
author

Document metadata

date created
2004-05-07
date modified
2004-05-07