Bloom of Filamentous Bacteria in a Mesotrophic Lake: Identity and Potential Controlling Mechanism
Open Access
- 1 October 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 70 (10) , 6272-6281
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.70.10.6272-6281.2004
Abstract
Ephemeral blooms of filamentous bacteria are a common phenomenon in the water column of oligo- to mesotrophic lakes. It is assumed that the appearance of such morphotypes is favored by selective predation of bacterivorous protists and that filter-feeding zooplankton plays a major role in suppressing these bacteria. The phylogenetic affiliation of the important bloom-forming filamentous bacteria in freshwaters is presently unknown. Here we report the identification of dominant members of a filamentous bacterial assemblage during a bloom of such morphotypes in a mesotrophic lake. By molecular cloning and fluorescence in situ hybridization with specific oligonucleotide probes, up to 98% of filamentous cells in lake water could be assigned to a clade of almost identical (99% similarity) 16S rRNA gene sequence types, the cosmopolitan freshwater LD2 cluster. For a period of less than 1 week, members of the LD2 clade constituted >40% of the total bacterial biomass, potentially favored by high grazing of planktivorous protists. This is probably the most pronounced case of dominance by a single bacterioplankton species ever observed in natural freshwaters. In enclosures artificially stocked with the metazoan filter feederDaphnia, bacteria related to the LD2 clade formed a significantly larger fraction of filaments than in enclosures whereDaphniahad been removed. However, in the presence of higher numbers ofDaphniaindividuals, the LD2 bacteria, like other filaments, were eventually eliminated both in enclosures and in the lake. This points at the potential importance of filter-feeding zooplankton in controlling the occurrence and species composition of filamentous bacterial morphotypes in freshwater plankton.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Successful Predation of Filamentous Bacteria by a Nanoflagellate Challenges Current Models of Flagellate BacterivoryApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2004
- Massive occurrence of heterotrophic filaments in acidified lakes: seasonal dynamics and compositionFEMS Microbiology Ecology, 2003
- Cascading predation effects of Daphnia and copepods on microbial food web componentsFreshwater Biology, 2003
- Rapid Screening for Freshwater Bacterial Groups by Using Reverse Line Blot HybridizationApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2003
- Grazing of protozoa and its effect on populations of aquatic bacteriaFEMS Microbiology Ecology, 2001
- Impact of metazoan and protozoan grazers on bacterial biomass distribution in microcosm experimentsAquatic Microbial Ecology, 1997
- Top-down effects on the size-biomass distribution of a freshwater bacterioplankton communityAquatic Microbial Ecology, 1996
- Seasonal dynamics of crustacean zooplankton, heterotrophic nanoflagellates and bacteria in a shallow, eutrophic lakeFreshwater Biology, 1995
- Bacterivory in algae: A survival strategy during nutrient limitationLimnology and Oceanography, 1993
- Unusual bloom of star-like prosthecate bacteria and filaments as a consequence of grazing pressureMicrobial Ecology, 1989