학술논문

Effects of the cultivable bacteria attached to Microcystis colonies on the colony size and growth of Microcystis
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Freshwater Ecology, Vol 34, Iss 1, Pp 663-673 (2019)
Subject
microcystis
cyanobacterial bloom
bacterial isolates
colony size
growth
denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis
Environmental sciences
GE1-350
Ecology
QH540-549.5
Language
English
ISSN
0270-5060
2156-6941
02705060
Abstract
The interactions between bacteria and algae may play a significant part in the formation and development of algal blooms. The bloom-forming cyanobacterium Microcystis occurs mainly as colonial form in natural waters, and thus it is necessary to study the interaction between bacteria and colonial Microcystis. This paper aimed to investigate effects of the cultivable bacteria attached to Microcystis colonies on the colony size and growth of colonial Microcystis aeruginosa. Eleven bacterial strains were isolated from M. aeruginosa colonies collected from Lake Taihu. Among these bacteria, seven bacterial isolates significantly influenced the colony size of M. aeruginosa, and four bacterial isolates significantly influenced the growth rate of M. aeruginosa. Four isolates, related to the Exiguobacterium, Delftia, Bacillus and Stenotrophomonas, significantly decreased the colony size of M. aeruginosa by 36-51%, and two isolates, assigned to the Chryseobacterium and Pseudomonas chengduensis, significantly increased the M. aeruginosa colony size by 89% and 63%, respectively, while these isolates had no effect on the cyanobacterial growth rate. Two isolates, belonged to the Rheinheimera and Pseudomonas, significantly decreased the growth rate of M. aeruginosa by 47% and 36%, respectively, and one bacterial strain related to Aeromonas increased the cyanobacterial growth rate by 22%, while these isolates had no effect on the cyanobacterial colony size. One isolate belonged to Sphingomonas was found to significantly increase the colony size of M. aeruginosa by 80% and significantly decrease the growth rate of M. aeruginosa by 21%. PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) analysis showed that all of the bacterial isolates were able to colonize M. aeruginosa colonies. Our data suggested that the bacteria attached to Microcystis colonies might influence the cyanobacterial colony size and growth, and thus influence the formation and development of Microcystis blooms.