| Literature DB >> 24190089 |
D L Lambert1, P N Taylor, R Goulder.
Abstract
Natural assemblages of freshwater bacterioplankton in enriched lowland rivers had greater cell-specific metabolic activity than those in gravel-pit ponds. Similarly, cell-specific activity and mean cell Size in calcareous headstreams tended to be greater than in intermittently-acid headstreams on millstone grit. DNA was extracted and purified from bacterioplankton assemblages, and between-site comparisons were made in terms of percentage similarity as indicated by DNA hybridization. Cluster analysis, using percentage-similarity matrices, placed bacterioplankton assemblages from different site types into distinct groups. This suggested that between-site physiological differences were related to intrinsically different bacterial composition rather than to different physiological response to different environmental conditions by essentially similar bacterial assemblages.Entities:
Year: 1993 PMID: 24190089 DOI: 10.1007/BF00176952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Ecol ISSN: 0095-3628 Impact factor: 4.552