4 research outputs found
Diurnal Floc Generation from Neuston Biofilms in Two Contrasting Freshwater Lakes
Selective
adaptation of biofilm-forming bacteria to the nutrient-rich
but environmentally challenging conditions of the surface microlayer
(SML) or neuston layer was evident in littoral regions of two physically
and geochemically contrasting freshwater lakes. SML bacterial communities
(bacterioneuston) in these systems were depleted in <i>Actinobacteria</i>, enriched in either <i>Betaproteobacteria</i> or <i>Gammaproteobacteria</i>, and either unicellular <i>Cyanobacteria</i> were absent or microbial mat forming <i>Cyanobacteria</i> enriched relative to communities in the underlying shallow water
column (0.5 m depth). Consistent with the occurrence of biofilm-hosted,
geochemically distinct microhabitats, As-, Fe-, and S-metabolizing
bacteria including anaerobic taxa were detected only in the SML in
both systems. Over diurnal time scales, higher wind speeds resulted
in the generation of floc from SML biofilms, identifying a transport
mechanism entraining SML accumulated microorganisms, nutrients, and
contaminants into the underlying water column. The energy regime experienced
by the SML was more important to floc generation as larger flocs were
more abundant in the larger, oligotrophic lake (higher relative energy
regime) compared to the sheltered, smaller lake, despite relatively
higher concentrations of bacteria, organic carbon, Fe, and PO<sub>4</sub><sup>3–</sup> in the latter system