Abstract
Biomass, production and heterotrophic activity of bacterioplankton were determined for two weeks in the Great Astrolabe Reef lagoon, Fiji. Bacterial and Bacterial activities were distributed homogeneously throughout the water column (20 to 40 m deep) and varied little from site to site inside the lagoon. Bacterioplankton biomass and production also varied little over a diel period with coefficients of variation of 9 and 22%, respectively. On average, over the whole study, bacterial abundance was 0.77×109 cells l-1 and bacterial production averaged 0.36 μg-at. C l-1 d-1. Bacterial abundance and production were greater in the lagoon than in oceanic waters. Attachment to particles seems to provide an advantage for bacterioplankton growth because specific growth rates for attached bacterioplankton were, on average, significantly greater than that of the free community. Growth efficiency, determined by correlating the net increase of bacterial biomass and the net decrease of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in dilution cultures, was very low (average 6.6%). Using carbon growth efficiency and bacterial production rates, heterotrophic activity was estimated to average 5.4 μg-at. C l-1 d-1. The turn-over rate of DOC (average 114 μg-at. C l-1) due to bacterial consumption was estimated to be 0.048 d-1 during the period of study.
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Accepted: 25 July 1998
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Torréton, JP. Biomass, production and heterotrophic activity of bacterioplankton in the Great Astrolabe Reef lagoon (Fiji). Coral Reefs 18, 43–53 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s003380050152
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s003380050152