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Long-Term Dynamics of Microbial Biofilm Communities of the River Rhine with Special References to Ciliates

Authors :
Markus Esser
Barbara Ackermann
Anja Scherwaß
Hartmut Arndt
Source :
International Review of Hydrobiology. 96:1-19
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Wiley, 2011.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to quantify and qualify seasonal changes of all important components of a microbial biofilm community. We explored the development of the biofilm community structure on submerged glass slides for 15 months including all organisms from bacteria to macro-invertebrates. Besides bacteria, heterotrophic flagellates were the most abundant biofilm component followed by ciliates, meiofauna organisms and algae. Most important were sessile choanoflagellates, peritrichous ciliates and some crustaceans. Ciliates and macrofauna were the most important components with regard to the total biovolume. The biofilm architecture was strongly influenced by extracellular structures produced by protozoans and macro-invertebrates. Alterations within the biofilm community were mainly due to changes in abundances rather than in the composition except for heterotrophic flagellates and macroinvertebrates. Biofilm organisms were dominated by planktivorous organisms exerting a strong grazing impact on the plankton organisms in this large river.

Details

ISSN :
14342944
Volume :
96
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Review of Hydrobiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e521b490bb2f01b09b202df9d5f7ecbc