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Biofouling
The Journal of Bioadhesion and Biofilm Research
Volume 25, 2009 - Issue 8
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Original Articles

Development of the initial diatom microfouling layer on antifouling and fouling-release surfaces in temperate and tropical Australia

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Pages 685-694 | Received 01 Mar 2009, Accepted 29 May 2009, Published online: 22 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Diatoms are a major component of the slime layers that form on artificial surfaces in marine environments. In this article, the role played by diatoms during the pioneering stages of colonization of three marine antifouling (AF) coatings, viz Intersmooth 360®, Super Yacht 800® and a fouling-release (FR) coating Intersleek 700®, was investigated. The study was conducted over three distinct seasons in two very different marine environments in Australia, ie temperate Williamstown, Victoria and tropical Cairns, Queensland. Diatom fouling occurred more rapidly on the FR coating Intersleek 700, compared to both biocidal AF paints. However, colonization by diatoms on all three coatings was generally slow during the 16-day study. Benthic diatoms do not subsist by floating around in the water column, rather they only gain the opportunity to colonize new surfaces when they either voluntarily release or are displaced from their benthic habitat, thereafter entering the water column where the opportunity to adhere to a new surface presents itself. However, once settled, fouling diatoms grow exponentially from the site of attachment, spreading out until they populate large areas of the surface. This mode of surface colonization correlates more with an ‘infection’ type, epidemiology model, a mechanism that accounts for the colonization of significant regions of the coating surface from a single fouling diatom cell, forming ‘clonal patches’. This is in comparison to the bacterial colonization of the surface, which exhibits far more rapid recruitment and growth of cells on the substratum surface. Therefore, it is hypothesized that fouling diatoms may be characterized more by their ability to adhere and grow on surfaces already modified by bacterial biofilms, rather than on their strength of adhesion. Cell morphology and the ability to avoid shear may also be an important factor.

Acknowledgements

The Australian Research Council (ARC Linkage Grant LP0454982) and our industry partner International Paint (Akzo Nobel), Gateshead, UK, provided funding for this project. The authors also thank Mr John Lewis, Ms Lyn Fletcher and colleagues from the Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO), Department of Defense for their financial and technical assistance in facilitating this study. Paul Molino thanks the David Hay Memorial Fund for financial assistance in the preparation of this article.

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