Main
topics of the team "Biologie de la mangrove"...
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1/ Interactions between thioautotrophic bacteria
and marine invertebrates: a case of chemosynthetic models.
Various marine organisms, living in sulphidic environments, are
associated with symbiotic bacteria. In our lab we completely control
the shallow water lucinid (Codakia orbicularis), associated
with intracellular bacteria that colonized its gills. Usually, tropical
bivalves belonging to the lucinidae family offer interesting perspectives
of research like those actually in progress in the lab concerning
the cellular and tissular plasticity of the gill during a stress
and the evolution of the intracellular bacterial population kept
in starvation. This bivalve family, easily maintained in the lab,
becomes a unique generic model to understand symbiosis relationships
between bacteria and deep-sea organisms like those colonizing hydrothermal
vents or cold seeps. We also studied the interaction between sulfur-oxidizing
bacteria with other invertebrates (nematodes, protozoan, bryozoans,
etc) colonizing sunken organic substrates such as wood falls or
whale falls.
2/ Organisation and functioning of the
mangrove in association with sedentary species.
This topic concerns vertebrates
(Fishes), invertebrates (Molluscs), protists (vorticellids, diatoms,
etc.) and microorganisms (eubacteria and archae). We try to better
understand the mangrove ecosystem focusing on the geochemical cycles
(nitrogen-, sulfur- and carbon-cycle) involving the complex prokaryotic
flora found in the mangrove sediment. We also study the flux between
various sedentary species living in this marine ecosystem. Thus,
it is a multidisciplinary topic (involving chemistry, geochemistry,
physics, and biology) which will represent the main axis of our
research for the next years. We will focus on microorganisms (especially
on giant mesophilicarchae (Thaumarchae) recently described by our
lab in this ecosystem. Mangrove is an incredible ecosystem to study
biodiversity for this kind of archae with huge biomass whose organization
and role in the mangrove remains unknown at this time.
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