4.6 Article

Prey selectivity of bacterivorous protists in different size fractions of reservoir water amended with nutrients

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages 1330-1339

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2006.01026.x

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An experiment designed to examine food preferences of heterotrophic nanoflagellates (HNF) grazing on bacterioplankton was performed in the freshwater Rimov reservoir (Czech Republic). Water samples were size-fractionated to obtain < 5 mu m filtrate containing bacteria and HNF. To manipulate resource availability, < 5 mu m treatments were incubated in dialysis bags submerged in the barrels filled with the unfiltered reservoir water amended with either orthophosphate or glucose or combination of both. We employed rRNA-targeted probes to assess HNF prey preferences by analysing bacterial prey in HNF food vacuoles compared with available bacteria. Actinobacteria (the HGC69a probe) were avoided by HNF in all treatments. Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroidetes bacteria (the CF319a probe) were positively selected mainly in treatments in which bacteria were heavily grazed, the < 5 mu m treatments, but this trend was less pronounced towards the end of the study. The members of a small subcluster of Betaproteobacteria (the R-BT065 probe) were mostly positively selected. The nutrient amendments differentially affected bacterioplankton dynamics in almost all treatments, and together with the size fractionation, altered HNF overall bacterivory as well as prey selection. Analyses of bacterivores in unfiltered treatments allowed to detect the effect of different protists on shifts in HNF selectivity observed in < 5 mu m compared with unfiltered treatments.

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