Title of article :
Autogenic versus environmental control during development of river biofilm
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
In the natural environment, microbial community structure of river biofilm is controlled by biotic
and abiotic factors. This study explored the capacity to manipulate the structure of microbial communities by
modifying environmental conditions during the course of biofilm development. River epilithic biofilm was
cultivated in situ on artificial substrates placed parallel to river water flow. Substrates were incubated for 3
and 5.5 weeks in river to allow natural biofilm development, at two sites with contrasting physico-chemical
characteristics. The first site (Aurade´ , Gers, France) was located in an agricultural watershed basin and the
second site (Larroque, Haute-Garonne, France) was located in a forested watershed basin. After 3 weeks of
biofilm development, a subset of substrates was collected from one site and transplanted to the second site
where they remained for 2.5 further weeks. Epilithic bacterial community structure (at 3 weeks from each site
and at 5.5 weeks from biofilms with and without transplantation) was assessed using PCR-DGGE of
16S rDNA fragment. Biofilm biomass was estimated using ash free dry mass (AFDM). After 3 weeks of development,
biofilms from the two sites exhibited comparable AFDM values (average of 1.4¡0.2 g.mx2).
A difference between the two sites was observed after 5.5 weeks of development: AFDM decreased for biofilms
from the agricultural watershed basin (from 1.4 to 0.18 g.mx2) as a consequence of grazing pressure
(Bithynia), and increased for biofilms from the forested agricultural watershed (from 1.4 to 2.6 g.mx2).
Microbial community analyses revealed a differentiated community structure between biofilms from the different
sites and exhibited a change of microbial community structure after 5.5 weeks of biofilm development.
These observations confirm a process of ecological succession in microbial communities. Changing the
incubation site during biofilm development modified the trajectory of these ecological successions, suggesting
that site characteristics mainly conditioned the structure of these microbial communities.
Keywords :
Colonization experiment , community structure , Microbial ecology , Succession , Grazing
Journal title :
Annales de Limnologie - International Journal of Limnology
Journal title :
Annales de Limnologie - International Journal of Limnology