Authors
Roman Stocker, Justin R Seymour
Publication date
2012/12
Source
Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews
Volume
76
Issue
4
Pages
792-812
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Description
Intuitively, it may seem that from the perspective of an individual bacterium the ocean is a vast, dilute, and largely homogeneous environment. Microbial oceanographers have typically considered the ocean from this point of view. In reality, marine bacteria inhabit a chemical seascape that is highly heterogeneous down to the microscale, owing to ubiquitous nutrient patches, plumes, and gradients. Exudation and excretion of dissolved matter by larger organisms, lysis events, particles, animal surfaces, and fluxes from the sediment-water interface all contribute to create strong and pervasive heterogeneity, where chemotaxis may provide a significant fitness advantage to bacteria. The dynamic nature of the ocean imposes strong selective pressures on bacterial foraging strategies, and many marine bacteria indeed display adaptations that characterize their chemotactic motility as “high performance” compared to that of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Stocker, JR Seymour - Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, 2012