Abstract

Heterotrophic marine nanoflagellates are important grazers on bacteria in the water column. Some marine bacteria appear more resistant to grazing than do others. Marine nanoflagellates can be grown in the laboratory in batch cultures fed specific bacterial isolates. In some cultures, the flagellates appear unable to completely deplete the bacterial prey even when the bacterial strain otherwise is an excellent prey. This may indicate that some marine bacteria are able to induce defence mechanisms if they are grazed by nanoflagellates. Four morphologically distinct marine heterotrophic nanoflagellates, of which 3 were still identified as Procryptobia sorokini (Kinetoplastea) and one as Paraphysomonas imperforata (Chrysophyceae) were isolated from a coastal location along with 3 isolates of the marine bacterium Pseudoalteromonas sp. Flagellate growth and grazing on bacterial prey were analysed in batch cultures. Pseudoalteromonas was a suitable prey for all 4 flagellate isolates. They grazed and grew on Pseudoalteromonas as sole prey with maximal cell-specific growth rates of 0.1–0.25 h-1 and gross growth efficiencies of 38–61%. Exposure to dense flagellate cultures or their supernatants did, however, cause a fraction of the Pseudoalteromonas cells to aggregate and the bacterium became apparently resistant to grazing. Concentrations of suspended Pseudoalteromonas cells were therefore not decreased below 1,700–7,500 cells μL-1 by any of the flagellate isolates. These results indicate that Pseudoalteromonas sp. can be an excellent prey to marine nanoflagellates but also that is in possession of inducible mechanisms that protect against flagellate grazing.

Highlights

  • Heterotrophic nanoflagellates play important roles in marine environments as bacterial grazers

  • The 4 nanoflagellates isolated in this study, Procryptobia sorokini G5, B11, A5 and Paraphysomonas imperforata A2 were all able to graze and grow on Pseudoalteromonas sp. as their sole prey

  • Our data suggest that Pseudoalteromonas can be excellent prey for flagellates and that the presence of flagellates rapidly can induce growth independently defence mechanisms against grazing in Pseudoalteromonas sp

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Summary

Introduction

Heterotrophic nanoflagellates play important roles in marine environments as bacterial grazers. Bacteria of the genus Pseudoalteromonas are widespread in marine environments [31] and among the bacteria that can readily be isolated from seawater and grown in axenic cultures in the laboratory. These bacteria are believed to be suitable prey for marine nanoflagellates since flagellate grazing apparently maintains the concentration of Pseudoalteromonas and other large gram-negative bacteria low in the sea [32]. We have quantified growth of 4 heterotrophic, interception feeding, marine nanoflagellates feeding on 3 Pseudoalteromonas isolates, verified that Pseudoalteromonas sp. is excellent prey to these marine flagellates, and observed that Pseudoalteromonas appears to be in possession of defence mechanisms that can be induced to protect them from being grazed by the flagellates

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