Skip to main content
SLU publication database (SLUpub)

Research article1997Peer reviewed

Microbial Response of a Freshwater Benthic Community to a Simulated Diatom Sedimentation Event: Interactive Effects of Benthic Fauna

Goedkoop, W; Gullberg, KR; Johnson, RK; Ahlgren, I

Abstract

The response of a sediment microbial assemblage to a pulse of diatoms was studied over 36 days by measuring bacterial activity and biomass, ATP concentration, and overall community respiration in laboratory microcosms. Also, the contribution of macrofaunal chironomids to the decomposition of settling diatoms in benthic communities, and the relative importance of benthic meiofauna in community metabolism, were determined.The addition of diatoms resulted in an immediate response by sediment bacteria, with higher bacterial production recorded after only 2 h, and a more than tenfold increase within one day. The rapid response by sediment bacteria was accompanied by relatively high initial concentrations of dissolved organic carbon. In treatments receiving diatoms, higher bacterial production was sustained throughout the experiment. Surprisingly, neither these elevated production estimates, nor the starvation of controls affected bacterial abundance. Mean bacterial cell volume, however, was markedly affected by the addition of diatoms. Combining community respiration measurements and bacterial production estimates showed that growth efficiencies for sediment bacteria ranged from 14.6 to 34.5%. The contribution of ambient meiozoobenthos to carbon metabolism was less than 1%. Carbon budgets showed that 1.3 mg C was cooxidized along with 4.3 mg added diatom C.Sediment reworking by Chironomus larvae initially enhanced bacterial production, but the presence of Chironomus resulted in lower bacterial production estimates after 16 and 36 days. This was interpreted as a result of faster decomposition of diatoms in treatments with chironomids, which was validated by a faster decline of ATP and chlorophyll a in the sediment. Our results indicate that Chironomus larvae compete with sediment bacteria for available organic substrates.

Published in

Microbial Ecology
1997, Volume: 34, number: 2, pages: 131-143

        SLU Authors

      • Johnson, Richard

        • Department of Environmental Assessment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

      UKÄ Subject classification

      Ecology

      Publication identifier

      DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002489900043

      Permanent link to this page (URI)

      https://res.slu.se/id/publ/88285