Abstract
Seasonal and spatial patterns of specific uptake rates of amino acids by bacteria in Lake Constance were studied. The total bacterial population was divided into small (0.2- to 1.0-micron) and large (1.0- to 3.0-micron) free-living bacteria and attached bacteria by fractionated filtration. Data for attached bacteria, received by retention on 3.0-micron-pore Nuclepore filters, were corrected for free-living bacteria in this fraction. Specific uptake rates based on autoradiography were also recorded. Specific uptake rates for attached bacteria ranged from 9.41 X 10(-11) to 6.11 X 10(-8) ng of C h-1 cell-1 and were therefore significantly greater than those for free-living bacteria during most time periods. However, they were not significantly different from those for cells proven to be active by autoradiography. Specific uptake rates for small free-living bacteria ranged between 7.68 X 10(-11) and 4.60 X 10(-9) ng of C h-1 cell-1. They were nearly in the same range of those for large free-living bacteria (5.10 X 10(-11) to 1.07 X 10(-8) ng of C h-1 cell-1), although both fractions exhibited pronounced differences in their seasonal and vertical distributions.
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