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Bacterial Colonization and Ectoenzymatic Activity in Phytoplankton-Derived Model Particles. Part II. Cleavage and Uptake of Carbohydrates

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Abstract

The bacterial colonization and development of the ectoenzymatic glucosidase activity and glucose uptake were followed together with bacterial growth (measured as thymidine incorporation) in laboratory experiments, using phytoplankton-derived particles incubated in rolling tanks. Bacterial colonization of the particles was rapid. In the particles, bacterial turnover rates (production/biomass) were low (0.02 to 0.14 d−1). In the ambient water, turnover rates increased from 0.1 d−1 to 23.3 d−1, until the end of the experiment. In the control, lacking any particles, turnover of bacteria ranged from 0.3 to 7.6 d−1. Similarly, glucose uptake rates, per bacterium, were 1 to 2 orders of magnitude lower for particle-attached bacteria than for their free-living counterparts. Generally, Km values for glucosidase activity declined, over the incubation period, in particles and free-living bacteria until 168 h, and slightly increased, thereafter, to values of approximately 0.1 μM. Particle-attached bacteria exhibited significantly lower uptake rates of both thymidine and glucose, per bacterium, throughout the incubation. The per-cell ectoenzymatic activity was similar in particle-associated and free-living bacteria during the initial phase of the experiment, but was significantly higher after ≈200 h. Dissolved total (TCHO), as well as monomeric carbohydrates (MCHO), declined continuously in both particles and ambient water; they remained constant in the control; TCHO comprised about 50% of the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the particles. In ambient water TCHO contribution to DOC varied, with only one exception, between 25 and 45%; and in the control, between 20 and 50%. The shift detectable in the relation between ectoenzymatic activity and uptake of glucose between free-living and attached bacteria over the incubation period may reflect changes in the physiological status of the bacteria.

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Received: 3 February 1997; Accepted: 6 November 1997

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Agis, M., Unanue, M., Iriberri, J. et al. Bacterial Colonization and Ectoenzymatic Activity in Phytoplankton-Derived Model Particles. Part II. Cleavage and Uptake of Carbohydrates. Microb Ecol 36, 66–74 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002489900094

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002489900094

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