Greetings All !
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12569299#post12569299 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Leopard Man
... Can someone clarify exactly what types of bacteria are being produced, besides denitrifying ones. ...
For some insight into the dizzying array of bacteria that are potentially present in our captive marine ecosystems, check this one out ...
Diversity of bacteria associated with the Caribbean coral Montastraea franksi
Rowher, Breitbart, Jara, Azam & Knowlton
Coral Reefs (2001) 20: 85-91
Full Article
http://www.marine.usf.edu/genomics/PDFs of papers/rohweretal2001.pdf
Do a quick scan of Tables 1 & 2 on pages 4 and 5, respectively. If this type of consortia is being introduced into our systems by the corals that we place into our tanks, all the listed bacteria are potentially detaching from their coral holobiont association ... and therefore may be involved in the biofilm(s) that we are primarily interested in when we discuss nitrification & denitrification.
Folks who think that
Nitrosomonas,
Nitrobacter, and
Biospira are the only bacterial players involved in the biogeochemical pathways that stablize the nutrient levels in our systems are woefully uninformed.
Arguably more interesting is the follow-up research ...
Diversity and distribution of coral-associated bacteria
Forest Rohwer, Victor Seguritan, Farooq Azam, Nancy Knowlton
Marine Ecology Progress Series (2002) Vol. 243: 1-10
Full Article
http://striweb.si.edu/publications/PDFs/Knowlton_2002_MarEcoProSer.pdf
Check out Figure 4 on page 7 for yet another detailed list of indentified strains. More intriguing is this quote from the abstract, "
Analysis of only 14 coral samples yielded 430 distinct bacterial ribotypes. Statistical analyses suggest that additional sequencing would have resulted in a total of 6000 bacterial ribotypes."
It's quotes like this that lead me to conclude that the notion that we can produce a "monoculture" by carbon dosing is laughable. Competitive exclusion is NOT the only ecological mechanism in play. "Constructive interference" is also operant ... just what did you think that bacterial inoculants were actually doing? Merely increasing bacterial biomass? ...
... :lol:
It should also be noted that the relationship between the bacterial guild in our systems, and the color & growth patterns of zooxanthellate corals, may be significantly more interesting than is commonly acknowledged in reefkeeping discussion boards. A model of this relationship is presented in Figure 5 on page 8 (extracted below) of the 2002 article.
Not JMO ... this is the science.
:thumbsup: