Abstract
Although exoenzyme accumulation is often proposed as an explanation for the high metabolic activity of biofilms, little is known about the abundance, distribution and turnover rates of exoenzymes within these communities. To assess accumulation, epilithic biofilm samples were collected from a fourth-order boreal river and homogenized. The resulting particles were fractionated by size and each fraction was assayed for nine exoenzyme activities, chlorophyll, and ATP. In general, carbohydrase activities were not correlated with microbial biomass indicators; the largest pool of activity was in the aqueous phase (< 0.2 µm). Phenol oxidase, peroxidase, and phosphatase activities were largely particle-bound and often correlated with microbial biomass distribution. It was concluded that the epilithic biofilm matrix was effective at accumulating carbohydrase activity and that this accumulation may partially account for the metabolic resistance of epilithic biofilms to dissolved organic matter fluctuations.
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Sinsabaugh, R.L., Repert, D., Weiland, T. et al. Exoenzyme accumulation in epilithic biofilms. Hydrobiologia 222, 29–37 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00017497
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00017497