The contribution of marine aggregate-associated bacteria to the accumulation of pathogenic bacteria in oysters: an agent-based model
Authored by Andrew M Kramer, J Evan Ward, Fred C Dobbs, Melissa L Pierce, John M Drake
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.2467
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
R
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
http://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.m56c1
Abstract
Bivalves process large volumes of water, leading to their accumulation
of bacteria, including potential human pathogens (e.g., vibrios). These
bacteria are captured at low efficiencies when freely suspended in the
water column, but they also attach to marine aggregates, which are
captured with near 100\% efficiency. For this reason, and because they
are often enriched with heterotrophic bacteria, marine aggregates have
been hypothesized to function as important transporters of bacteria into
bivalves. The relative contribution of aggregates and unattached
bacteria to the accumulation of these cells, however, is unknown. We
developed an agent-based model to simulate accumulation of vibrio-type
bacteria in oysters. Simulations were conducted over a realistic range
of concentrations of bacteria and aggregates and incorporated the
dependence of pseudofeces production on particulate matter. The model
shows that the contribution of aggregate-attached bacteria depends
strongly on the unattached bacteria, which form the colonization pool
for aggregates and are directly captured by the simulated oysters. The
concentration of aggregates is also important, but its effect depends on
the concentration of unattached bacteria. At high bacterial
concentrations, aggregates contribute the majority of bacteria in the
oysters. At low concentrations of unattached bacteria, aggregates have a
neutral or even a slightly negative effect on bacterial accumulation.
These results provide the first evidence suggesting that the
concentration of aggregates could influence uptake of pathogenic
bacteria in bivalves and show that the tendency of a bacterial species
to remain attached to aggregates is a key factor for understanding
species-specific accumulation.
Tags
snow
Suspension-feeding bivalves
Crassostrea-virginica
Vibrio-vulnificus
Microbial communities
Particle retention
Attached bacteria
Filtration-rate
Mytilus-edulis
Mollusks