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Resumen de Estuarine Microbial Food Web Patterns in a Lake Erie Coastal Wetland

P.J. Lavrentyev, Mark J. McCarthy, D.M. Klarer, Frank J. Jochem, W.S. Gardner

  • Composition and distribution of planktonic protists were examined relative to microbial food web dynamics (growth, grazing, and nitrogen cycling rates) at the Old Woman Creek (OWC) National Estuarine Research Reserve during an episodic storm event in July 2003. More than 150 protistan taxa were identified based on morphology. Species richness and microbial biomass measured via microscopy and flow cytometry increased along a stream–lake (Lake Erie) transect and peaked at the confluence. Water column ammonium (NH +4) uptake (0.06 to 1.82 μM N h–1) and regeneration (0.04 to 0.55 μM N h–1) rates, measured using 15NH +4 isotope dilution, followed the same pattern. Large light/dark NH +4 uptake differences were observed in the hypereutrophic OWC interior, but not at the phosphorus-limited Lake Erie site, reflecting the microbial community structural shift from net autotrophic to net heterotrophic. Despite this shift, microbial grazers (mostly choreotrich ciliates, taxon-specific growth rates up to 2.9 d–1) controlled nanophytoplankton and bacteria at all sites by consuming 76 to 110% and 56 to 97% of their daily production, respectively, in dilution experiments. Overall, distribution patterns and dynamics of microbial communities in OWC resemble those in marine estuaries, where plankton productivity increases along the river–sea gradient and reaches its maximum at the confluence.


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