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The gut microenvironment of sediment-dwelling Chironomus plumosus larvae as characterised with O2, pH, and redox microsensors
Authors:Peter Stief  Gundula Eller
Affiliation:Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Celsiusstrasse 1, 28359 Bremen, Germany. peter.stief@biology.au.dk
Abstract:We devised a set-up in which microsensors can be used for characterising the gut microenvironment of aquatic macrofauna. In a small flow cell, we measured microscale gradients through dissected guts (O2, pH, redox potential [E h ]), in the haemolymph (O2), and towards the body surface (O2) of Chironomus plumosus larvae. The gut microenvironment was compared with the chemical conditions in the lake sediment in which the animals reside and feed. When the dissected guts were incubated at the same nominal O2 concentration as in haemolymph, the gut content was completely anoxic and had pH and E h values slightly lower than in the ambient sediment. When the dissected guts were artificially oxygenated, the volumetric O2-consumption rates of the gut content were at least 10× higher than in the sediment. Using these potential O2-consumption rates in a cylindrical diffusion–reaction model, it was predicted that diffusion of O2 from the haemolymph to the gut could not oxygenate the gut content under in vivo conditions. Additionally, the potential O2-consumption rates were so high that the intake of dissolved O2 along with feeding could be ruled out to oxygenate the gut content. We conclude that microorganisms present in the gut of C. plumosus cannot exhibit an aerobic metabolism. The presented microsensor technique and the data analysis are applicable to guts of other macrofauna species with cutaneous respiration.
Keywords:Animal–  microbe interaction  Freshwater sediment  Macrofauna  Microorganisms  Oxygen
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