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Production of exopolymer particles by marine bacterioplankton under contrasting turbulence conditions

125

Citations

22

References

1999

Year

Abstract

It has recently been shown that marine bacterioplankton release copious amounts of capsular material as 'semi-labile' to 'refractory' dissolved organic carbon (DOC) into the ambient water. The fate of this bacterioplankton-derived DOC remains largely unknown. Here we investigate the capability of this bacterial-derived capsular DOC to coagulate to exopolymer particles under contrasting turbulence reglmes. Under high turbulence, fewer but larger particles (>2 pm In diameter) were detected, while the total exopolymer particle-mass (>0.2 pm) was higher under stagnant conditions. Under stagnant conditions most of the bacterial-derived particles remained in the size-class between 0.2 and 2 pm. The production rate of exopolymer particles was estimated to amount to about 4 am01 C cell-' h-', representing about 25 % of the previously estimated bacterioplankton DOC release of about 15 am01 C cell-' h-' Considering that bacterioplankton represent the largest living surface in the ocean, the release and subsequent coagulation of bacterioplankton-derived capsular DOC might be an important, thus far largely neglected mechanism of exopolymer particle formation in the ocean.

References

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