Science. 1986 May 16;232(4752):865-7. doi: 10.1126/science.232.4752.865.
Recent determinations of high production rates (up to 30 percent of primary production in surface waters) implicate free-living marine bacterioplankton as a link in a "microbial loop" that supplements phytoplankton as food for herbivores. An enclosed water column of 300 cubic meters was used to test the microbial loop hypothesis by following the fate of carbon-14-labeled bacterioplankton for over 50 days. Only 2 percent of the label initially fixed from carbon-14-labeled glucose by bacteria was present in larger organisms after 13 days, at which time about 20 percent of the total label added remained in the particulate fraction. Most of the label appeared to pass directly from particles smaller than 1 micrometer (heterotrophic bacterioplankton and some bacteriovores) to respired labeled carbon dioxide or to regenerated dissolved organic carbon-14. Secondary (and, by implication, primary) production by organisms smaller than 1 micrometer may not be an important food source in marine food chains. Bacterioplankton can be a sink for carbon in planktonic food webs and may serve principally as agents of nutrient regeneration rather than as food.
最近的研究表明,海洋自由生活细菌具有很高的生产力(在地表水的初级生产力中高达 30%),它们作为“微生物环”的一个环节,补充了浮游植物作为食草动物的食物。通过对一个 300 立方米的封闭水柱进行超过 50 天的碳-14 标记细菌的追踪实验,以验证“微生物环”假说。在 13 天后,只有初始时从碳-14 标记葡萄糖中固定的细菌的 2%存在于较大的生物体中,此时添加的总标记物的约 20%仍留在颗粒部分。大部分标记物似乎直接从小于 1 微米的颗粒(异养细菌和一些噬菌细菌)传递到被呼吸的标记二氧化碳或再生的溶解有机碳-14。小于 1 微米的生物体的次级(而且,暗示着初级)生产可能不是海洋食物链中的一个重要食物来源。细菌可能是浮游生物食物网中碳的汇,并主要作为营养物质再生的代理,而不是食物。