Microbial indicators of aquatic ecosystem change: current applications to eutrophication studies

Date

2003 Dec 5

Authors

Paerl HW
Dyble J
Moisander PH
Noble RT
Piehler MF
Pinckney JL
Steppe TF
Twomey L
Valdes LM

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

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Abstract

Human encroachment on aquatic ecosystems is increasing at an unprecedented rate. The impacts of human pollution and habitat alteration are most evident and of greatest concern at the microbial level, where a bulk of production and nutrient cycling takes place. Aquatic ecosystems are additionally affected by natural perturbations, including droughts, storms, and floods, the frequency and extent of which may be increasing. Distinguishing and integrating the impacts of natural and human stressors is essential for understanding environmentally driven change of microbial diversity and function. Microbial bioindicators play a major role in detecting and characterizing these changes. Complementary use of analytical and molecular indicator tools shows great promise in helping us clarify the processes underlying microbial population, community, and ecosystem change in response to environmental perturbations. This is illustrated in phytoplankton (microalgal and cyanobacterial) and bacterial community changes in a range of US estuarine and coastal ecosystems experiencing increasing development in their water- and airsheds as well as climatic changes (e.g., increasing hurricane frequency). Microbial indicators can be adapted to a range of monitoring programs, including ferries, moored instrumentation, and remote sensing, in order to evaluate environmental controls on microbial community structure and function over ecosystem to global scales. (C) 2003 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

Description

233-246

Keywords

estuaries, microbial indicator, nutrient, eutrophication, pollutant, climate, ecological change, NEUSE RIVER ESTUARY, POLYMERASE-CHAIN-REACTION, NORTH-CAROLINA, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, GALVESTON-BAY, PHYTOPLANKTON, COASTAL, NITROGEN, WATERS, CYANOBACTERIA

Citation