Trophic modes of large Antarctic foraminifera: roles of carnivory, omnivory, and detritivory
Trophic modes of large Antarctic foraminifera: roles of carnivory, omnivory, and detritivory
Astrammina rara, Crithionina delacai, and Notodendrodes hyalinosphaira are 3 of the
largest and most abundant members of the foraminiferal assemblage at a shallow-water (28 to 32 m)
site in Explorers Cove, Antarctica. This study summarizes observations from 2 decades of research,
during which we employed laboratory-based feeding experiments and fatty acid biomarker analysis
to characterize trophic dynamics and ecological roles of the 3 species. In feeding experiments, A. rara
consumed a variety of co-occurring metazoans (several Crustacea, Mollusca, Echinodermata, and a
Nephtys species). C. delacai, N. hyalinosphaira, and a number of other foraminiferal species from
Explorers Cove successfully trapped Artemia sp. nauplius prey in a setup designed to examine the
efficiency of prey capture. Fatty acid analyses on samples from early (November 7, 2001) and late
(January 31, 2002) austral summer revealed that the 3 species contained substantial amounts (33 to
45.5%) of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), which are produced by microalgae, indicating the
downwards transfer of carbon from sea-ice associated primary production. In the case of A. rara, this
may be due to the ingestion of herbivorous metazoa, rather than direct uptake of microalgal material.
A. rara contained significantly (p < 0.05) higher amounts of the zooplankton biomarkers 20:1(n–9)
and 22:1(n–11), and C. delacai contained more PUFAs early, compared to late, in the season. Two
morphotypes of N. hyalinosphaira had different fatty acid profiles, indicating distinct trophotypes.
Our results illustrate specific adaptations to different trophic resources in these protists, and they
demonstrate the potential impact that large carnivorous species of Foraminifera may have on the
structure of benthic communities where they are abundant.
Foraminifera, Trophic ecology, Benthic, Food web, Carnivory, Antarctic, Explorers
Cove · Community structure
155-164
Suhr, Stephanie B.
5cca202e-d82c-490e-942c-297704823e6c
Alexander, Stephen P.
335aada6-fa5d-45b7-9176-8cca9a97da58
Gooday, Andrew J.
d9331d67-d518-4cfb-baed-9df3333b05b9
Pond, David W.
3d0d013e-d9e0-4fc3-b30c-12f7f24bec6d
Bowser, Samuel S.
19bb96ee-83f4-4c76-ba75-433b5d158dd5
2008
Suhr, Stephanie B.
5cca202e-d82c-490e-942c-297704823e6c
Alexander, Stephen P.
335aada6-fa5d-45b7-9176-8cca9a97da58
Gooday, Andrew J.
d9331d67-d518-4cfb-baed-9df3333b05b9
Pond, David W.
3d0d013e-d9e0-4fc3-b30c-12f7f24bec6d
Bowser, Samuel S.
19bb96ee-83f4-4c76-ba75-433b5d158dd5
Suhr, Stephanie B., Alexander, Stephen P., Gooday, Andrew J., Pond, David W. and Bowser, Samuel S.
(2008)
Trophic modes of large Antarctic foraminifera: roles of carnivory, omnivory, and detritivory.
Marine Ecology Progress Series, 371, .
(doi:10.3354/meps07693).
Abstract
Astrammina rara, Crithionina delacai, and Notodendrodes hyalinosphaira are 3 of the
largest and most abundant members of the foraminiferal assemblage at a shallow-water (28 to 32 m)
site in Explorers Cove, Antarctica. This study summarizes observations from 2 decades of research,
during which we employed laboratory-based feeding experiments and fatty acid biomarker analysis
to characterize trophic dynamics and ecological roles of the 3 species. In feeding experiments, A. rara
consumed a variety of co-occurring metazoans (several Crustacea, Mollusca, Echinodermata, and a
Nephtys species). C. delacai, N. hyalinosphaira, and a number of other foraminiferal species from
Explorers Cove successfully trapped Artemia sp. nauplius prey in a setup designed to examine the
efficiency of prey capture. Fatty acid analyses on samples from early (November 7, 2001) and late
(January 31, 2002) austral summer revealed that the 3 species contained substantial amounts (33 to
45.5%) of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), which are produced by microalgae, indicating the
downwards transfer of carbon from sea-ice associated primary production. In the case of A. rara, this
may be due to the ingestion of herbivorous metazoa, rather than direct uptake of microalgal material.
A. rara contained significantly (p < 0.05) higher amounts of the zooplankton biomarkers 20:1(n–9)
and 22:1(n–11), and C. delacai contained more PUFAs early, compared to late, in the season. Two
morphotypes of N. hyalinosphaira had different fatty acid profiles, indicating distinct trophotypes.
Our results illustrate specific adaptations to different trophic resources in these protists, and they
demonstrate the potential impact that large carnivorous species of Foraminifera may have on the
structure of benthic communities where they are abundant.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 2008
Keywords:
Foraminifera, Trophic ecology, Benthic, Food web, Carnivory, Antarctic, Explorers
Cove · Community structure
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 64122
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/64122
ISSN: 0171-8630
PURE UUID: 9c98aad3-b00c-426f-b752-d1b6cd22eae0
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 01 Dec 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:46
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Stephanie B. Suhr
Author:
Stephen P. Alexander
Author:
Andrew J. Gooday
Author:
David W. Pond
Author:
Samuel S. Bowser
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics