AI Article Synopsis

  • Autotrophic biofilms are essential in aquatic ecosystems, serving as food for invertebrates and protecting against toxic metals.
  • A lab study examined how phosphorus and silver contamination affect the quantity and quality of biofilms, particularly their biochemical and elemental makeup.
  • Results revealed that while stressors changed the composition and quality of the biofilms, phosphorus positively influenced growth rates in crustaceans, highlighting the complex interactions between environmental stressors and food web dynamics.

Article Abstract

Autotrophic biofilms are complex and fundamental biological compartments of many aquatic ecosystems. In particular, these biofilms represent a major resource for many invertebrate consumers and the first ecological barrier against toxic metals. To date, very few studies have investigated the indirect effects of stressors on upper trophic levels through alterations of the quality of biofilms for their consumers. In a laboratory study, we investigated the single and combined effects of phosphorus (P) availability and silver, a re-emerging contaminant, on the elemental [carbon (C):nitrogen (N):P ratios] and biochemical (fatty acid profiles) compositions of a diatom-dominated biofilm initially collected in a shallow lake. We hypothesized that (1) P and silver, through the replacement of diatoms by more tolerant primary producer species, reduce the biochemical quality of biofilms for their consumers while (2) P enhances biofilm elemental quality and (3) silver contamination of biofilm has negative effects on consumers life history traits. The quality of biofilms for consumers was assessed for a common crustacean species, , by measuring organisms' survival and growth rates during a 42-days feeding experiment. Results mainly showed that species replacement induced by both stressors affected biofilm fatty acid compositions, and that P immobilization permitted to achieve low C:P biofilms, whatever the level of silver contamination. Gammarids growth and survival rates were not significantly impacted by the ingestion of silver-contaminated resource. On the contrary, we found a significant positive relationship between the biofilm P-content and gammarids growth. This study underlines the large indirect consequences stressors could play on the quality of microbial biomass for consumers, and, in turn, on the whole food web.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6476900PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.00732DOI Listing

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