Abstract

Potential uptake and clearance rates of fluorescent microspheres (FM) from 0.25 to 4.05 μm diameter were determined for the non-loricate ciliate Pseudocohnilembus sp. from Antarctic sea ice. The percentage of ciliate cells that ingested FM after 20 min incubation decreased with increasing particle diameter. Pseudocohnilembus sp. ingested FM between 0.25 and 4.05 μm in diameter. We offered FM at concentrations less than natural concentrations for plankton plus detrital material and obtained clearance rates less than those previously reported for bactivorous ciliates. Clearance rates were 3.6–5.4 nl cell−1 h−1 for FM 0.5 and 1 μm diameter, respectively, but decreased to 1.1 nl cell−1 h−1 for 1.97 μm diameter and 1.4 nl cell−1 h−1 for 4.05-μm-diameter FM. Clearance and uptake rates of FM 0.5 and 1 μm diameter indicate that Pseudocohnilembus sp. principally grazes on bacteria-sized particles. However, it can also ingest organisms as large as nanoplankton and may graze particles as small as femtoplankton and colloids. This suggests a feeding strategy that may suit the temporal and spatial changes in food availability in the sea-ice habitat.

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