Abstract

In a seasonal study we used immunofluorescence to follow a specific bacterial population, as well as total numbers, through the fore-, mid-, and hindgut of a deposit feeder, Abarenicola pacifica. We chose a pseudomonad because of its high ambient abundance. On five dates, we collected A. pacifica gut contents, with concurrent measurements of sedimentary food quality (chlorophyll a, protein, bacterial abundance), animal egestion rates (inversely proportional to gut residence time), and temperature. Increasing bacterial numbers from ingested sediment to foregut contents, and decreases from foregut to midgut indicate significant selection and digestion, respectively, of both the pseudomonad and the total bacterial community. Inverse correlations between egestion rate and digestive removal of bacteria offer some support for the prediction that digestion of bacteria is proportional to time spent exposed to digestive enzymes, although the significance of the associated statistical tests is marginal. No hindgut growth of the pseudomonad was observed, likely due to the short gut residence time of A. pacifica. The pseudomonad showed variation of less than a factor of 3 in its ambient sedimentary abundance over the year.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call