Artículos de revistas
Diatom-driven recolonization of microbial mat-dominated siliciclastic tidal flat sediments
Fecha
2017-10Registro en:
Pan, Jeronimo; Cuadrado, Diana Graciela; Bournod, Constanza Naimé; Diatom-driven recolonization of microbial mat-dominated siliciclastic tidal flat sediments; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; FEMS microbiology ecology; 93; 10; 10-2017; 1-13
1574-6941
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Pan, Jeronimo
Cuadrado, Diana Graciela
Bournod, Constanza Naimé
Resumen
Modern microbial mats and biofilms play a paramount role in sediment biostabilization. When sporadic storms affect tidal flats of Bahía Blanca Estuary, the underlying siliciclastic sediment is exposed by physical disruption of the mat, and in a few weeks' lapse, a microbial community re-establishes. With the objective of studying colonization patterns and the ecological succession of microorganisms at the scale of these erosional structures, these were experimentally made and their biological recolonization followed for 8 weeks, with replication in winter and spring. Motile pennate diatoms led the initial colonization following two distinct patterns: a dominance by Cylindrotheca closterium in winter and by naviculoid and nitzschioid diatoms in spring. During the first 7 days, cell numbers increased 2- to 17-fold. Cell densities further increased exhibiting sigmoidal community growth, reaching 2.9-8.9 × 106 cells cm-3 maxima around day 30; centric diatoms maintained low densities throughout. In 56 days after removal of the original mat, filamentous cyanobacteria that dominate mature mats did not establish a significant biomass, leading to the rejection of the hypothesis that cyanobacteria would drive the colonization. The observed dominance of pennate diatoms is attributed to extrinsic factors determined by tidal flooding, and intrinsic ones, e.g. motility, nutrient affinity and high growth rate.