3 resultados para CYANOBACTERIUM ANABAENA
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Resumo:
The distribution patterns of benthic algal assemblages in the Tinto, Odiel and Piedras rivers were analyzed during the winter of 2005 in 18 sampling stations. The main objective was to assess and compare the algal communities and parameters affecting them both in the zones affected by acid mine drainage (AMD) and in naturally alkaline waters. A total of 108 benthic diatom taxa and 31 non-diatom taxa were identi ed. Results showed large differences between algal communities in the two environments: Pinnularia acoricola, P. subcapitata and Eunotia exigua were the most frequent diatom taxa in regions affected by acid mine drainage, along with algae like Klebsormidium and Euglena mutabilis were the most relevant non-diatom taxa. In alkaline waters the dominant diatom taxa were Planothidium frequentissimum, Gomphonema angustum, Fragilaria capucina, and some species of Navicula (N. viridula, N. veneta or N. radiosa), accompanied by Oscillatoria and Anabaena as well as by streptophytes of the group of zygnemataceae and desmidiaceae
Resumo:
Se realizan recuentos ,aislamiento, identificación y determinación de la actividad Nitrogenasa de algas azules en muestras de suelo y agua, durante dos ciclos de cultivo del arroz . Los recuentos se realizan por la técnica del 'Plate Count', utilizando el medio de Chu y los resultados muestran grandes fluctuaciones en las muestras de agua, manteniéndose más altos y uniformes en las muestras de suelo. Después del aislamiento e identificación, llegamos a obtener colonias algales correspondientes en su mayor parte a los géneros Anabaena y Nostoc, las cuales se someten posteriormente a ensayos de reducción del acetileno, para determinar su actividad fijadora de nitrógeno. La especie identificada como N. humifusum, es en nuestras condiciones, la que posee mayor actividad fijadora, además de ser la más común en los dos campos de arroz ensayados.
Resumo:
Symbiotic interactions between ascidians (sea-squirts) and microbes are poorly understood. Here we characterized the cyanobacteria in the tissues of 8 distinct didemnid taxa from shallow-water marine habitats in the Bahamas Islands by sequencing a fragment of the cyanobacterial 16S rRNA gene and the entire 16S-23S rRNA internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) and by examining symbiont morphology with transmission electron (TEM) and confocal microscopy (CM). As described previously for other species, Trididemnum spp. mostly contained symbionts associated with the Prochloron-Synechocystis group. However, sequence analysis of the symbionts in Lissoclinum revealed two unique clades. The first contained a novel cyanobacterial clade, while the second clade was closely associated with Acaryochloris marina. CM revealed the presence of chlorophyll d (chl d) and phycobiliproteins (PBPs) within these symbiont cells, as is characteristic of Acaryochloris species. The presence of symbionts was also observed by TEM inside the tunic of both the adult and larvae of L. fragile, indicating vertical transmission to progeny. Based on molecular phylogenetic and microscopic analyses, Candidatus Acaryochloris bahamiensis nov. sp. is proposed for this symbiotic cyanobacterium. Our results support the hypothesis that photosymbiont communities in ascidians are structured by host phylogeny, but in some cases, also by sampling location.