Choanoflagellates alongside diverse uncultured predatory protists consume the abundant open-ocean cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus .
Susanne WilkenCharmaine C M YungCamille PoirierRamon MassanaValeria JimenezAlexandra Z WordenPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Prochlorococcus is a key member of open-ocean primary producer communities. Despite its importance, little is known about the predators that consume this cyanobacterium and make its biomass available to higher trophic levels. We identify potential predators along a gradient wherein Prochlorococcus abundance increased from near detection limits (coastal California) to >200,000 cells mL -1 (subtropical North Pacific Gyre). A replicated RNA-Stable Isotope Probing experiment involving the in situ community, and labeled Prochlorococcus as prey, revealed choanoflagellates as the most active predators of Prochlorococcus , alongside a radiolarian, chrysophytes, dictyochophytes, and specific MAST lineages. These predators were not appropriately highlighted in multiyear conventional 18S rRNA gene amplicon surveys where dinoflagellates and other taxa had highest relative amplicon abundances across the gradient. In identifying direct consumers of Prochlorococcus , we reveal food-web linkages of individual protistan taxa and resolve routes of carbon transfer from the base of marine food webs.
Keyphrases
- human health
- minimally invasive
- genome wide
- induced apoptosis
- healthcare
- risk assessment
- wastewater treatment
- copy number
- computed tomography
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- antibiotic resistance genes
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- heavy metals
- molecular dynamics simulations
- quantum dots
- anaerobic digestion
- sensitive detection
- pi k akt