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Looking for the dominant marine bacterivores. Ramon Massana Institut de Ciències del Mar (CSIC), Barcelona MEDOCEAN meeting, 28 November 2013. Looking for the dominant marine bacterivores. Smetacek 2002. Nature. Heterotrophic flagellates - Main bacterial grazers.
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Looking for the dominant marine bacterivores Ramon Massana Institut de Ciències del Mar (CSIC), Barcelona MEDOCEAN meeting, 28 November 2013
Looking for the dominant marine bacterivores Smetacek 2002. Nature
Heterotrophic flagellates - Main bacterial grazers Unicellular eukaryotes, colorless, and with flagella Ubiquitous in the plankton at abundances around 1000 cells ml-1 Most are 1-3 µm in size Exhibit phylogenetic and functional diversity Beyond the simplified microbial loop … Heterotrophic flagellates as algivorous and osmotrophs Mixotrophic flagellates as bacterivorous Viruses as a factor for bacterial mortalityå Azam et al. 1983. Mar. Ecol. Progr. Ser
Heterotrophic flagellates - Microscopy DAPI-stained epifluorescence microscopyThe only quantitative approach Very poor identification power 5 µm
Paraphysomonas imperforataDominates (up to 98% of cells) in flagellate enrichments in the US East Coast Represents <1% in natural samples Lim et al. 1999. Limnol. Oceanogr. Heterotrophic flagellates – Culturing bias The most common in pelagic marine waters (by culturing, enrichments and direct observations) Stramenopiles Bicosoecida Caecitellus parvulus Cafeteria roenbergensis Boroka karpovii Chrysopytes Paraphysomonas imperforata Pedinellids Pteridomonas danica Kinetoplastids Neobodo designis Rynchomonas nasuta Inserta sedis Ancyromonas sigmoides Amastigomonas debruynei
Heterotrophic flagellates – Environmental molecular surveys Analysis of 18S rDNA sequences retrieved from the environment • 40 studies on marine microeukaryotes since 2001 • 8719 environmental sequences Massana 2011. Annu Rev. Microbiol.
Groups with cultured heterotrophic flagellates Massana 2011. Annu Rev. Microbiol.
Marine Stramenopiles - MAST (novel, uncultured groups) Massana et al. 2002. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. Massana et al. 2004. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
DAPI FISH Ingested FLB MAST-4 as a model heterotrophic flagellate A bacterivorous heterotrophic picoeukaryote DAPI FISH 10 µm Massana et al. 2006. Environ. Microbiol. Grazing rate: 1–3 bacteria h-1 Bacterial mortality: 1 to 10% of production Massana et al. 2009. ISME J.
MAST-4 as a model heterotrophic flagellate Widely distributed and abundant FISH q-PCR Rodríguez-Martínez et al. 2009. Environ. Microbiol.
MAST-4 as a model heterotrophic flagellate Limited genetic diversity GenBank sequences
MAST-4 as a model heterotrophic flagellate Global distribution and environmental selection ~550 bp – 123 ARISA fingerprints Rodríguez-Martínez et al. submitted
MAST-4 as a model heterotrophic flagellate Global distribution and environmental selection Rodríguez-Martínez et al. submitted
Summary The diversity of heterotrophic flagellates is poorly investigated The culturing bias a main drawnback in the ecology of heterotrophic flagellates The novel MAST lineages are important marine heterotrophic flagellates Single Amplified Genomics provide new opportunities for ecological and evolutionary studies MAST-4 is a nice model of heterotrophic flagellates Widespread in euphotic waters Accounts for ~10% of cells Active bacterial grazer Limited diversity (only 5 clades)
Acknowledgments Institut de Ciències del Mar Raquel Rodríguez-Martínez Ramiro Logares Javier del Campo Massimo Pernice Caterina Rodríguez-Giner Irene Forn Vanessa Balagué Station Biologique de Roscoff, France Fabrice Not Colomban de Vargas Instituto Tecnológico de Chascomús, Argentina Fernando Unrein University of Washington, USA Gabrielle Rocap Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, USA Mike Sieracki Ramunas Stepanauskas you for your attention !