Burnet Jean-Baptiste, Faraj Tarek, Cauchie Henry-Michel, Joaquim-Justo Célia, Servais Pierre, Prévost Michèle, Dorner Sarah M
Canada Research Chair in Source Water Protection, Department of Civil, Geological and Mining Engineering, Polytechnique Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Environmental Research and Innovation, Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology, Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg.
PLoS One. 2017 Feb 8;12(2):e0171705. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0171705. eCollection 2017.
The faecal indicator Escherichia coli plays a central role in water quality assessment and monitoring. It is therefore essential to understand its fate under various environmental constraints such as predation by bacterivorous zooplankton. Whereas most studies have examined how protozooplankton communities (heterotrophic nanoflagellates and ciliates) affect the fate of E. coli in water, the capacity of metazooplankton to control the faecal indicator remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigated how the common filter-feeding cladoceran, Daphnia pulex, affects the fate of E. coli under different experimental conditions. Daphnia ingested E. coli and increased its loss rates in water, but the latter rates decreased from 1.65 d-1 to 0.62 d-1 after a 1,000-fold reduction in E. coli initial concentrations, due to lower probability of encounter between Daphnia and E. coli. The combined use of culture and PMA qPCR (viability-qPCR) demonstrated that exposure to Daphnia did not result into the formation of viable but non-culturable E. coli cells. In lake water, a significant part of E. coli population loss was associated with matrix-related factors, most likely due to predation by other bacterivorous biota and/or bacterial competition. However, when exposing E. coli to a D. pulex gradient (from 0 to 65 ind.L-1), we observed an increasing impact of Daphnia on E. coli loss rates, which reached 0.47 d-1 in presence of 65 ind.L-1. Our results suggest that the filter-feeder can exert a non-negligible predation pressure on E. coli, especially during seasonal Daphnia population peaks. Similar trials using other Daphnia species as well as stressed E. coli cells will increase our knowledge on the capacity of this widespread zooplankter to control E. coli in freshwater resources. Based on our results, we strongly advocate the use of natural matrices to study these biotic interactions in order to avoid overestimation of Daphnia impact.
粪便指示菌大肠杆菌在水质评估和监测中起着核心作用。因此,了解其在各种环境限制因素(如食细菌浮游动物的捕食)下的命运至关重要。虽然大多数研究探讨了原生动物浮游生物群落(异养纳米鞭毛虫和纤毛虫)如何影响水中大肠杆菌的命运,但后生浮游生物控制粪便指示菌的能力仍知之甚少。在本研究中,我们调查了常见的滤食性枝角类动物——大型溞在不同实验条件下如何影响大肠杆菌的命运。大型溞摄取大肠杆菌并增加其在水中的损失率,但在大肠杆菌初始浓度降低1000倍后,后者的损失率从1.65 d⁻¹降至0.62 d⁻¹,这是因为大型溞与大肠杆菌相遇的概率降低。培养和PMA qPCR(活菌定量PCR)的联合使用表明,暴露于大型溞不会导致形成活的但不可培养的大肠杆菌细胞。在湖水中,大肠杆菌种群损失的很大一部分与基质相关因素有关,很可能是由于其他食细菌生物群的捕食和/或细菌竞争。然而,当将大肠杆菌暴露于大型溞梯度(从0至65个个体·L⁻¹)时,我们观察到大型溞对大肠杆菌损失率的影响不断增加,在存在65个个体·L⁻¹时达到0.47 d⁻¹。我们的结果表明,这种滤食性动物可以对大肠杆菌施加不可忽视的捕食压力,尤其是在季节性大型溞种群高峰期。使用其他大型溞物种以及应激大肠杆菌细胞进行类似试验,将增加我们对这种广泛存在的浮游动物控制淡水资源中大肠杆菌能力的了解。基于我们的结果,我们强烈主张使用天然基质来研究这些生物相互作用,以避免高估大型溞的影响。