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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Dec 1996, 4395-4400, Vol 62, No. 12
R Sommaruga, A Oberleiter and R Psenner
The effects of UV-B radiation on the heterotrophic nanoflagellate Bodo
saltans (Kinetoplastida) were examined under controlled conditions with
artificial UV sources and also under natural solar radiation in an
oligotrophic lake. In both types of experiments, the characteristic
elongated cell morphology of this flagellate changed into a spherical one.
This effect was due to UV-B but also to UV-A radiation, and after 4 h of
exposure at 0.5 m of depth, 99% (UV-B plus UV-A plus photosynthetically
active radiation) and 69% of the cells (UV-A plus photosynthetically active
radiation) were spherical. At 6 m of depth where only 10% of the UV-B (305
nm) at the surface was measured, no significant effect was observed. The
spherical cells were nonmotile, but before the morphological change took
place, the swimming speed was ca. 3.5 times lower in the plus-UV-B
treatment. The negative relation between the abundance of spherical cells
and the average ingestion of fluorescently labeled bacteria per cell
indicates that these cells are not able to feed upon bacteria. In
bacterivory experiments lasting for 6 h, the total number of grazed
bacteria was up to 70% lower in the plus-UV-B treatment than in the control
without UV-B. This resulted in a positive feedback between UV-B and
bacterial growth. The high sensitivity of B. saltans to solar UV-B and UV-A
radiation strongly reduces its ability to live near the surface at times of
high UV radiation.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Effect of UV Radiation on the Bacterivory of a Heterotrophic Nanoflagellate
Institute of Zoology and Limnology, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck 6020, Austria
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