Article

The common bloom-forming cyanobacterium Microcystis is prone to a wide array of microbial antagonists

Details

Citation

Van Wichelen J, Vanormelingen P, Codd G & Vyverman W (2016) The common bloom-forming cyanobacterium Microcystis is prone to a wide array of microbial antagonists. Harmful Algae, 55, pp. 97-111. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2016.02.009

Abstract
Many degraded waterbodies around the world are subject to strong proliferations of cyanobacteria – notorious for their toxicity, high biomass build-up and negative impacts on aquatic food webs – the presence of which puts serious limits on the human use of affected water bodies. Cyanobacterial blooms are largely regarded as trophic dead ends since they are a relatively poor food source for zooplankton. As a consequence, their population dynamics are generally attributed to changes in abiotic conditions (bottom-up control). Blooms however generally contain a vast and diverse community of micro-organisms of which some have shown devastating effects on cyanobacterial biomass. For Microcystis, one of the most common bloom-forming cyanobacteria worldwide, a high number of micro-organisms (about 120 taxa) including viruses, bacteria, microfungi, different groups of heterotrophic protists, other cyanobacteria and several eukaryotic microalgal groups are currently known to negatively affect its growth by infection and predation or by the production of allelopathic compounds. Although many of these specifically target Microcystis, sharp declines of Microcystis biomass in nature are only rarely assigned to these antagonistic microbiota. The commonly found strain specificity of their interactions may largely preclude strong antagonistic effects on Microcystis population levels but may however induce compositional shifts that can change ecological properties such as bloom toxicity. These highly specific interactions may form the basis of a continuous arms race (co-evolution) between Microcystis and its antagonists which potentially limits the possibilities for (micro)biological bloom control.

Keywords
MLV; Microcystis-lysing viruses; MLB; Microcystis-lysing bacteria; MGF; Microcystis-grazing flagellates; MGA; Microcystis-grazing amoebae

Journal
Harmful Algae: Volume 55

StatusPublished
Publication date31/05/2016
Publication date online04/03/2016
Date accepted by journal19/02/2016
PublisherElsevier
ISSN1568-9883