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Author
Finlay, B.J.Publication Editor
Sutcliffe, D.W.Date
1997
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Protozoa feed on and regulate the abundance of most types of aquatic microorganisms, and they are an integral part of all aquatic microbial food webs. Being so small, aerobic protozoa thrive at low oxygen tensions, where they feed (largely unaffected by metazoan grazing) on the abundance of other microorganisms. In anaerobic environments, they are the only phagotrophic organisms, and they live in unique symbiotic consortia with methanogens, sulphate reducers and non-sulphur purple bacteria. The number of extant species of protozoa may be quite modest (the global number of ciliate species is estimated at 3000), and most of them probably have cosmopolitan distributions. This will undoubtedly make it easier to carry out further tasks, e.g. understanding the role of protozoan species diversity in the natural environment.Issue/Article Nr
5Page Range
113-125Title of Parent Book or Report
The microbiological quality of waterPublisher or University
Freshwater Biological AssociationSeries : Nr
FBA Special PublicationsCollections