Abstract

The impact of key environmental factors, salinity, prey, and temperature, on the survival and ecology of Bdellovibrio and like bacteria (BALOs), including the freshwater/terrestrial, non-halotolerant group and the halophilic Halobacteriovorax strains, has been assessed based on a review of data in the literature. These topics have been studied by numerous investigators for nearly six decades now, and much valuable information has been amassed and reported. The collective data shows that salinity, prey, and temperature play a major role in, not only the growth and survival of BALOs, but also the structure and composition of BALO communities and the distribution of the predators. Salinity is a major determinant in the selection of BALO habitats, distribution, prey bacteria, and systematics. Halophilic BALOs require salt for cellular functions and are found only in saltwater habitats, and prey primarily on saltwater bacteria. To the contrary, freshwater/terrestrial BALOs are non-halotolerant and inhibited by salt concentrations greater than 0.5%, and are restricted to freshwater, soils, and other low salt environments. They prey preferentially on bacteria in the same habitats. The halophilic BALOs are further separated on the basis of their tolerance to various salt concentrations. Some strains are found in low salt environments and others in high salt regions. In situ studies have demonstrated that salinity gradients in estuarine systems govern the type of BALO communities that will persist within a specific gradient. Bacterial prey for BALOs functions more than just being a substrate for the predators and include the potential for different prey species to structure the BALO community at the phylotype level. The pattern of susceptibility or resistance of various bacteria species has been used almost universally to differentiate strains of new BALO isolates. However, the method suffers from a lack of uniformity among different laboratories. The use of molecular methods such as comparative analysis of the 16S rDNA gene and metagenomics have provided more specific approaches to distinguished between isolates. Differences in temperature growth range among different BALO groups and strains have been demonstrated in many laboratory experiments. The temperature optima and growth range for the saltwater BALOs is typically lower than that of the freshwater/terrestrial BALOs. The collective data shows not only that environmental factors have a great impact on BALO ecology, but also how the various factors affect BALO populations in nature.

Highlights

  • “Everything is everywhere, but the environment selects” (Bass Becking 1934)

  • Host-independent variants of these isolates could grow on media without added NaCl and were assumed to have little or no requirement for sodium ions (Seidler and Starr, 1969b). This was consistent with findings that the freshwater/terrestrial (F/T) Bdellovibrio and like organisms (BALOs) were inhibited by salt concentrations greater than 0.5% (Varon and Shilo, 1968), which would classify them as non-halotolerant bacteria

  • Halobacteriovorax isolates from Delaware Bay sites and the Gulf Coast of Alabama recovered on V. parahaemolyticus preyed on other V. parahaemolyticus strains, but not on V. vulnificus, V. alginolyticus, E. coli, and Salmonella enterica (Table 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

“Everything is everywhere, but the environment selects” (Bass Becking 1934). This review explores the relevancy of this hypothesis to the group of predatory bacteria, Bdellovibrio and like organisms (BALOs). Some investigators have used a primary prey other than V. parahaemolyticus to isolate Halobacteriovorax strains that were subsequently used to test the susceptibilities of selected bacteria strains.

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