1. High viral infection rates in Antarctic and Arctic bacterioplankton.
- Author
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Säwström C, Granéli W, Laybourn-Parry J, and Anesio AM
- Subjects
- Antarctic Regions, Arctic Regions, Bacteria ultrastructure, Ecosystem, Plankton ultrastructure, Bacteria virology, Bacteriophages physiology, Fresh Water microbiology, Plankton virology
- Abstract
The frequency of visibly phage-infected bacterial cells (FVIB) and the average number of phages per cell [i.e. burst size (BS)] were determined in Antarctic and Arctic ultra-oligotrophic freshwater environments. Water samples were collected from two Antarctic freshwater lakes and cryoconite holes from a glacier in the Arctic. Data from this bipolar study show the highest FVIB (average 26.1%, range 5.1% to 66.7%) and the lowest BS (average 4, range 2-15) ever reported in the literature. The bacterial density is low in these ultra-oligotrophic freshwater environments but a large proportion of the bacteria are visibly infected. Our results suggest that a constant virioplankton population can be maintained in these extreme environments even though host density is low and often slow growing.
- Published
- 2007
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