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Waterborne viruses are responsible for numerous diseases and are abundant in aquatic systems. Understanding the fate of viruses in natural systems has important implications for human health. This research quantifies the uptake of bacteriophage T4 and the enteric virus echovirus 11 when exposed to the filter feeders Tetrahymena pyriformis and Daphnia magna, and also examines the potential of viral transfer due to trophic interactions. Experiments co-incubating each species with the viruses over 72-96 hours showed up to 4-log virus removal for T. pyriformis, while direct viral uptake by D. magna was not observed. However, viral uptake by D. magna occurred indirectly by viral transfer from prey to predator, through D. magna feeding on virus loaded T. pyriformis. This predator-prey interaction resulted in 1-log additional virus removal compared to removal by T.pyriformis alone. Incomplete viral inactivation by D. magna was observed through recovery of infective viruses from daphnid tissue. This research furthers our understanding of the impacts of zooplankton filter feeding on viral inactivation and shows the potential for viral transfer through the food chain. The viral-zooplankton interactions observed in these studies indicate that zooplankton may improve water quality through viral uptake or may serve as vectors for infection by accumulating viruses.
Alexandre Buttler, Edward Mitchell, Vincent Eric Jules Jassey
Damien Bouffard, Oscar Rodrigo Sepúlveda Steiner
Kristin Schirmer, Ahmed Tlili, Renata Behra