Marine Ecology Progress Series Inter-Research
Marine Ecology Progress Series

Inter-Research



MEPS
Home
Editors
Forthcoming
Information
Subscribe


Journals
Home
MEPS
AME
CR
DAO
Search
Subscribe

Books
Top Books
EE Books
Order

ECI
Home

EEIU
Home

MEPS 163:253-258 (1998)

Abstract

Patterns of differential digestion of bacteria in deposit feeders: a test of resource partitioning

Craig J. Plante1,*, April G. Shriver2

1Department of Biology, Grice Marine Biological Laboratory, University of Charleston, 205 Fort Johnson, Charleston, South Carolina 29412, USA
2Department of Zoology and Physiology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803, USA

*E-mail: plantec@cofc.edu

ABSTRACT: Diverse strains of bacteria vary in their susceptibilities to lysis by the digestive fluids of deposit-feeding invertebrates. Thus, sedimentary bacterial communities are influenced both qualitatively and quantitatively with gut passage. We tested the hypothesis that the rank order of lytic susceptibility of bacterial strains is consistent for an array of deposit feeders. A turbidimetric assay was used to test the lytic susceptibility of logarithmic phase cultures of 10 environmental isolates to the digestive fluids of 6 deposit feeders from diverse taxa. Lysis varied significantly among bacterial strains (p = 0.0002) and among deposit feeders from which digestive fluids were taken (p = 0.0258). Using rank correlation, we rejected the null hypothesis of independence among susceptibility trends. Particular bacterial strains were resistant to digestion, regardless of the deposit-feeding consumer, while the remaining strains showed fairly consistent patterns in their relative susceptibilities. At least qualitatively, models constructed to predict microbial community responses to gut passage, based on experiments with model organisms, should be applicable to diverse deposit-feeding taxa.

KEY WORDS: Sedimentary bacteria · Deposit feeder · Benthic microbial loop · Trophic interactions

Published in MEPS Vol. 163 (1998) on March 12
ISSN: 0171-8630. Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 1998

Copyright © 1999; Inter-Research Science Publisher
Webmaster: webmaster@int-res.com