The effect of surface colour on the formation of marine micro and macrofouling communities

Abstract

<div><p>The effect of substratum colour on the formation of micro- and macro fouling communities was investigated. Acrylic tiles, painted either black or white were covered with transparent sheets in order to ensure similar surface properties. All substrata were exposed to biofouling at 1 m depth for 40 d in the Marina Bandar al Rowdha (Muscat, Sea of Oman). Studies were conducted in 2010 over a time course of 5, 10 and 20 d, and in 2012 samples were collected at 7, 14 and 21 d. The densities of bacteria on the black and white substrata were similar with the exception of day 10, when the black substrata had a higher abundance than white ones. Pyrosequencing <i>via</i> 454 of 16S rRNA genes of bacteria from white and black substrata revealed that Alphaproteobacteria and Firmicutes were the dominant groups. SIMPER analysis demonstrated that bacterial phylotypes (uncultured Gammaproteobacteria, <i>Actibacter</i>, <i>Gaetbulicola, Thalassobius</i> and <i>Silicibacter</i>) and the diatoms (<i>Navicula directa</i>, <i>Navicula</i> sp. and <i>Nitzschia</i> sp.) contributed to the dissimilarities between communities developed on white and black substrata. At day 20, the highest amount of chlorophyll <i>a</i> was recorded in biofilms developed on black substrata. SIMPER analysis showed that <i>Folliculina</i> sp., <i>Ulva</i> sp. and <i>Balanus amphitrite</i> were the major macro fouling species that contributed to the dissimilarities between the communities formed on white and black substrata. Higher densities of these species were observed on black tiles. The results emphasise the effect of substratum colour on the formation of micro and macro fouling communities; substratum colour should to be taken into account in future studies.</p> </div

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