Very few studies have investigated marine microbial colonization in Polar Regions, but environmental changing scenarios stress the importance of these investigations to protect life in such extremely vulnerable ecosystems. In two different coastal sites of the Ross Sea (Road and Tethys Bays, Antarctica) exposed to different stressors, the microbial biofilm colonizing the surface of plastic (polyvynil chloride, PVC, and polyethylene, PE) panels left submerged in two experiments at dif-ferent timescales ("short-term": 3 months and "long-term": 9 and 12 months) was studied. The abundance and metabolic enzymatic activities [leucine aminopeptidase (LAP), beta-glucosidase (GLU) and alkaline phosphatase (AP)] of the prokaryotes and the microalgal abundance and species composition were analyzed, in parallel with the main environmental parameters. Prokaryotic community showed higher abundance and metabolic activities on PVC than on PE, as opposed to microalgae. A peak in the microfouling prokaryotic abundance and metabolic functions was fre-quently recorded after 3 months of immersion, corresponding to the late austral summer period. LAP and AP were the most active enzymes suggesting that microbial metabolic profiles were modulated by labile organic substrates. Our results suggested that the composition and function of microbial biofilm could be considered as sentinels of natural or anthropic-related disturbances.
Microbial biofilms colonizing plastic substrates in the Ross Sea (Antarctica)
Caroppo C;Azzaro M;Azzaro F;Maimone G;Rappazzo AC;Raffa F;Caruso G
2022
Abstract
Very few studies have investigated marine microbial colonization in Polar Regions, but environmental changing scenarios stress the importance of these investigations to protect life in such extremely vulnerable ecosystems. In two different coastal sites of the Ross Sea (Road and Tethys Bays, Antarctica) exposed to different stressors, the microbial biofilm colonizing the surface of plastic (polyvynil chloride, PVC, and polyethylene, PE) panels left submerged in two experiments at dif-ferent timescales ("short-term": 3 months and "long-term": 9 and 12 months) was studied. The abundance and metabolic enzymatic activities [leucine aminopeptidase (LAP), beta-glucosidase (GLU) and alkaline phosphatase (AP)] of the prokaryotes and the microalgal abundance and species composition were analyzed, in parallel with the main environmental parameters. Prokaryotic community showed higher abundance and metabolic activities on PVC than on PE, as opposed to microalgae. A peak in the microfouling prokaryotic abundance and metabolic functions was fre-quently recorded after 3 months of immersion, corresponding to the late austral summer period. LAP and AP were the most active enzymes suggesting that microbial metabolic profiles were modulated by labile organic substrates. Our results suggested that the composition and function of microbial biofilm could be considered as sentinels of natural or anthropic-related disturbances.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.