Grazing on bacteria by zooplankton in Australian billabongs
journal contribution
posted on 2023-04-03, 17:30authored byPaul I Boon, Russell J Shiel
Murray-Darling Freshwater Research Centre
MDFRC item.
Five species of rotifer (Brachionus lyratus, Conochilus dossuaris, Keratella cochlearis, Keratella quadrata and Trichotria tetractis) ingested bacteria at a prey density of 5-7 × 109 cells L.-1, and a sixth (Keratella procurva) did so at a higher bacterial concentration of 4 × 1010 cells L-1. Gastropus minor, Polyarthra vulgaris, Synchaeta pectinata and Trichocerca similis were not bacteriovores. Fluorescent-stained (DATF or acridine orange) bacteria were not suitable for determining which rotifers were potential grazers. However, bacteriovory was detected easily with safranin-red or methylene-blue stained bacteria. Clearance rates for the zooplankton community larger than 51µpm, determined with 3H-thymidine labelled bacteria, varied from <0.1-71 mL L-1. H-1, but were usually <5 mL L-1 h-1. Significant grazing was detected in >200µm, 90-200µm and 51-90µm fractions: it was impossible to ascribe bacteriovory to discrete taxonomic groups, because zooplankton taxa were not completely separated by these mesh sizes.
History
Publication Date
1990-07-01
Journal
Australian Journal of marine and freshwater research.