Differential grazing of selected marine algivorous amoebae on microalgae and bacteria
Loading...
Date
Authors
Burton, Daniel G.
O’Kelly, Charles
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Friday Harbor Laboratories
Abstract
Production of biofuels derived from the mass of photosynthetic organisms is gaining
attractiveness as climate change, resource shortage, and pollution events make it
less sensible to continue current modes of fossil fuel consumption. The high oil-toweight
ratio of algae yields potential as a sustainable source of biodiesel, but current
cultivation systems are plagued with contamination events leading to crop failure.
Protozoic amoebae are the culprits of this invasion and while their feeding
preferences or abilities are well known in regards to bacteria, with algae they are
not. To begin implying an index of susceptibility between amoebic strains and
marine algae, isolated Neoparamoeba sp., Paramoeba sp., and Thecamoeba sp.
specimens from Hawai’i were given treatments of marine algae (Chaetoceros sp.,
Pleurochrysis carterae, Nanochloropsis sp., Skeletonema marinoi, Isochrysis sp.) in
f/2- (silicon absent) media and algal density correlated to spectrophotometer
absorbance values. Also, bacterial treatments were smeared in a uni-directional
“raceway” on f/2- agar and the distance that amoebae from one end of the strip
recorded as average migration rate per day. These methods proved successful in
illustrating that the feeding abilities or preferences of marine amoebae vary greatly
across algal and bacterial species. This valuable insight may inform managerial
decisions in the event of contamination discovery and highlight directions for further
research into the specific relationships between marine algae, bacteria, and
amoebae that might either support or suppress the successful commercial cultivation
of algae as a feedstock for biodiesel.
