Abstract

Small eukaryotic phytoplankton are major contributors to global primary production and marine biogeochemical cycles. Many taxa are thought to be mixotrophic, but quantitative studies of phagotrophy exist for very few. In addition, little is known about consumers of Prochlorococcus, the abundant cyanobacterium at the base of oligotrophic ocean food webs. Here we describe thirty-nine new phytoplankton isolates from the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre (Station ALOHA), all flagellates ~2–5 µm diameter, and we quantify their ability to graze Prochlorococcus. The mixotrophs are from diverse classes (dictyochophytes, haptophytes, chrysophytes, bolidophytes, a dinoflagellate, and a chlorarachniophyte), many from previously uncultured clades. Grazing ability varied substantially, with specific clearance rate (volume cleared per body volume) varying over ten-fold across isolates and six-fold across genera. Slower grazers tended to create more biovolume per prey biovolume consumed. Using qPCR we found that the haptophyte Chrysochromulina was most abundant among the isolated mixotrophs at Station ALOHA, with 76–250 cells mL−1 across depths in the upper euphotic zone (5–100 m). Our results show that within a single ecosystem the phototrophs that ingest bacteria come from many branches of the eukaryotic tree, and are functionally diverse, indicating a broad range of strategies along the spectrum from phototrophy to phagotrophy.

Highlights

  • Small eukaryotic phytoplankton in the ‘pico’ (

  • Phototrophic and heterotrophic bacteria are themselves major contributors to pelagic production and biomass [11,12,13], and protists that can both photosynthesize and prey on prokaryotes may play a key role in regulating oceanic productivity, element cycling, and food web dynamics

  • To better understand these processes, more quantitative data is needed on grazing kinetics and growth efficiencies of the predominant grazers of prokaryotes. It may be consequential if the main grazers are mixotrophs, because models predict that mixotrophic consumers increase primary production and carbon export, and decrease nutrient remineralization, relative to heterotrophic consumers [14, 15]

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Summary

Introduction

Small eukaryotic phytoplankton in the ‘pico’ (

Methods
Results
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