Mixotrophic basis of Atlantic oligotrophic ecosystems
Mixotrophic basis of Atlantic oligotrophic ecosystems
Oligotrophic subtropical gyres are the largest oceanic ecosystems, covering >40% of the Earth's surface. Unicellular cyanobacteria and the smallest algae (plastidic protists) dominate CO2 fixation in these ecosystems, competing for dissolved inorganic nutrients. Here we present direct evidence from the surface mixed layer of the subtropical gyres and adjacent equatorial and temperate regions of the Atlantic Ocean, collected on three Atlantic Meridional Transect cruises on consecutive years, that bacterioplankton are fed on by plastidic and aplastidic protists at comparable rates. Rates of bacterivory were similar in the light and dark. Furthermore, because of their higher abundance, it is the plastidic protists, rather than the aplastidic forms, that control bacterivory in these waters. These findings change our basic understanding of food web function in the open ocean, because plastidic protists should now be considered as the main bacterivores as well as the main CO2 fixers in the oligotrophic gyres.
phytoplankton predation, phototrophic eukaryotes, primary producers, microbial grazers, pulse–chase labeling
5756-5760
Hartmann, M.
5b175765-fde7-40dc-bcd6-83248285ef86
Grob, C.
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Tarran, G.A.
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Martin, A.P.
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Burkill, P.H.
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Scanlan, D.J.
490e6b20-efac-4150-9f3a-418ac8658c00
Zubkov, M.V.
b1dfb3a0-bcff-430c-9031-358a22b50743
10 April 2012
Hartmann, M.
5b175765-fde7-40dc-bcd6-83248285ef86
Grob, C.
3cec4fd9-f807-498f-b2b5-489ba14cb335
Tarran, G.A.
c6e9fb51-321c-4fb6-a2b0-00a58c344d73
Martin, A.P.
9d0d480d-9b3c-44c2-aafe-bb980ed98a6d
Burkill, P.H.
91175019-8b55-4fb5-84ea-334c12de2557
Scanlan, D.J.
490e6b20-efac-4150-9f3a-418ac8658c00
Zubkov, M.V.
b1dfb3a0-bcff-430c-9031-358a22b50743
Hartmann, M., Grob, C., Tarran, G.A., Martin, A.P., Burkill, P.H., Scanlan, D.J. and Zubkov, M.V.
(2012)
Mixotrophic basis of Atlantic oligotrophic ecosystems.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 109 (15), .
(doi:10.1073/pnas.1118179109).
Abstract
Oligotrophic subtropical gyres are the largest oceanic ecosystems, covering >40% of the Earth's surface. Unicellular cyanobacteria and the smallest algae (plastidic protists) dominate CO2 fixation in these ecosystems, competing for dissolved inorganic nutrients. Here we present direct evidence from the surface mixed layer of the subtropical gyres and adjacent equatorial and temperate regions of the Atlantic Ocean, collected on three Atlantic Meridional Transect cruises on consecutive years, that bacterioplankton are fed on by plastidic and aplastidic protists at comparable rates. Rates of bacterivory were similar in the light and dark. Furthermore, because of their higher abundance, it is the plastidic protists, rather than the aplastidic forms, that control bacterivory in these waters. These findings change our basic understanding of food web function in the open ocean, because plastidic protists should now be considered as the main bacterivores as well as the main CO2 fixers in the oligotrophic gyres.
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Published date: 10 April 2012
Keywords:
phytoplankton predation, phototrophic eukaryotes, primary producers, microbial grazers, pulse–chase labeling
Organisations:
Marine Biogeochemistry
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 337186
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/337186
ISSN: 0027-8424
PURE UUID: c7402fc8-a588-45a0-bdc2-9ea3c5aa5b6e
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Date deposited: 19 Apr 2012 08:45
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 10:51
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Contributors
Author:
M. Hartmann
Author:
C. Grob
Author:
G.A. Tarran
Author:
A.P. Martin
Author:
P.H. Burkill
Author:
D.J. Scanlan
Author:
M.V. Zubkov
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