4.6 Article

Microbial activities in the burrow environment of the potamal mayfly Ephoron virgo

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FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
卷 49, 期 9, 页码 1152-1163

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2004.01258.x

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animal-microbe interactions; bioirrigation; bioturbation; Ephemeroptera; microbial activity; microsensor; Rhine; stream sediment

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1. The impact of burrowing larvae of Ephoron virgo (Ephemeroptera, Polymitarcidae) on sediment microbiology has not been previously investigated because of difficulties in sampling the sediment of large rivers under in situ conditions. Therefore, we conducted experiments in the on-ship Ecological Rhine Station of the University of Cologne (Germany), in which ambient conditions of the River Rhine can be closely mimicked. 2. In two consecutive seasons, experimental flow channels were stocked with Ephoron larvae and continuously supplied with water taken directly from the River Rhine. Sediment from the immediate vicinity of Ephoron burrows (i.e. U-shaped cavities reaching 10-80 mm deep into the sediment) and bulk sediment samples were analysed for (i) particulate organic matter content, (ii) microscale in situ distribution of O-2, NO3-, and NH4+, and (iii) potential activities of exoenzymes. 3. Sediment surrounding the Ephoron burrows had markedly higher organic matter contents and exoenzyme activities compared with the bulk sediment. Microsensor measurements demonstrated that local O-2 and NO3- penetration into the sediment were greatly enhanced by larval ventilation behaviour. Volumetric O-2 and NO3- turnover rates that were calculated from steady state concentration profiles measured directly in the burrow lining were considerably higher than at the sediment surface. 4. In the sediment of the fast flowing River Rhine Ephoron burrows are preferential sites of organic matter accumulation and dissolved oxidant penetration. Our data suggest that the burrows are surrounded by a highly active microbial community that responds to the inputs from the water column with elevated O-2 and N-3(-) turnover, and release of exoenzymes into the sediment pore water. Especially during periods of mass occurrence, the larvae of E. virgo may thus significantly contribute (i) to the ecological connection between the water column and the sediment and (ii) to biogeochemical processing of organic matter in the riverbed.

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