Published 2009
| Version v1
Publication
Benthic ecology of Vibrio spp. and pathogenic Vibrio species in a coastal Mediterranean environment (La Spezia Gulf, Italy)
Description
We carried out a 16-month in situ study to
investigate the ecology of Vibrio spp. and pathogenic Vibrio
species in coastal sediments of the Mediterranean Sea,
employing multiple-regression analysis to reveal the major
environmental factors controlling their occurrence in the
benthic environment. In addition, association between vibrios
and sediment-inhabiting meiofauna, which is a major
component of benthic ecosystems, was investigated. Culturable
and total Vibrio spp. estimates by most-probable-number
technique coupled with standard polymerase chain reaction
(PCR) and real-time PCR methods, respectively, were at least
one order of magnitude higher in sediment than in seawater.
In addition, potential human pathogenic species Vibrio
cholerae, Vibrio vulnificus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus
occurred in the sediment with V. parahaemolyticus being
the most frequently found. In the pelagic environment, 60%
of total variance in culturable Vibrio data was explained by
sea surface temperature (40%), salinity (13%) and organic
matter concentration (7%). In the benthic environment, sea
surface temperature was the only factor that significantly
affected culturable Vibrio occurrence although it explained
only 25% of total variance, suggesting that additional
unexplored factors may play a role as well. No correlation
was found between culturable Vibrio spp. concentrations and
the abundance of harpacticoid copepods in the sediment
whilst a negative correlation was found between Vibrio spp.
and nematode abundance which accounted for almost 90% of
the total meiofaunal density. Taxonomic analysis revealed
that selective bacterial feeders accounted for nearly 50% of
the total nematode community and included genera such as
Terschellingia, Molgolaimus and Halalaimus, suggesting that
top-down control by nematode grazing may be an important
factor affecting Vibrio occurrence in these sediments. It is
concluded that the benthic marine environment may function
as a reservoir of Vibrio spp. and potential pathogenic vibrios
whose ecological features appeared substantially different
from the ones recognised in the pelagic environment.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/251520
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/251520
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE