TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of light availability on mixotrophy and microzooplankton grazing in an oligotrophic plankton food web
T2 - Evidences from a mesocosm study in Eastern Mediterranean waters
AU - Calbet, Albert
AU - Martínez, Rodrigo A.
AU - Isari, Stamatina
AU - Zervoudaki, Soultana
AU - Nejstgaard, Jens C.
AU - Pitta, Paraskevi
AU - Sazhin, Andrey F.
AU - Sousoni, Despoina
AU - Gomes, Ana
AU - Berger, Stella A.
AU - Tsagaraki, Tatiana M.
AU - Ptacnik, Robert
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was funded through projects CTM2009-08783 from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation assigned to A.C. and projects LightDynamix, LiMic and LightCopFed from the European Union Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no. 228224, MESOAQUA, assigned to R.P. (LightDynamix), A.C., R.A.M., A.S., A.G. (LiMic) and S.I. (LightCopFed). We are indebted to G. Piperakis for his inspired technical assistance throughout the experiment, to S. Zivanovic, E. Dafnomili and Dr. M. Tsapakis for assistance with chemical analyses, and to I. Santi, P.A. Gazihan-Akoglu, and P. Dimitriou for conducting the Chl a analyses. The captain and the crew of the R/V Philia are thanked for their assistance during the transportation of water to the mesocosms. We also wish to thank Panagiotis Vavilis, Dimitris Apostolakis, Zacharias Grigorakis, Manolis Ntoumas and Manos Pettas for their immediate and willing response to our continuous requests for help with the zodiac. Finally, we want to thank the rest of participants of the mesocosm experiment: K. Altoja, P. Laas, S. Moorthi, R. Ptacnikova, S.J. Royer, S. Schabhueettl, M. Striebel, and T. Tanaka, for their help and support. [SS]
PY - 2012/8/1
Y1 - 2012/8/1
N2 - Plankton biomass and composition in the pelagic zone of oceans is exposed to changes in availability of light and nutrients due to large-scale ocean circulation and water column stratification. We hypothesized that displacement of plankton from surface to deeper darker waters would not only favor heterotrophy over time, as previously suggested, but also first rapidly affect the level of mixotrophy and, consequently, overall microbial grazing in plankton food webs. To test this in an oligotrophic marine system we incubated Eastern Mediterranean water (from 10m depth north of Crete in September 2010) in 2.8m 3 mesocosms simulating two different light intensities at the sampling station, surface waters (ca. 10m; mesocosms L1) and deeper layers (ca. 50-60m; mesocosms L4). The biomass and abundance of the main planktonic groups were monitored either daily or every second day, depending on the group. Microzooplankton grazing rates and the contribution of mixotrophic feeding were estimated by a combination of dilution experiments and incubations with live fluorescently labeled algae (LFLA). Although no nutrients were added to the mesocosms the chlorophyll a increased during the first 2days of the experiment in both treatments. This increase resulted from phytoplankton growth in the light L1-mesocosm (autotrophic biomass was ca. doubled in L1 compared to L4), but was mostly due to photoadaptation of the algae in the L4-mesocosm, as indicated by lower carbon to chlorophyll a ratios. By the end of the experiment, the total biomass of protozoan and metazoan grazers in L1 was ca. twofold higher than in L4. The microzooplankton responded within the first 24h, showing different grazing activity in L1 than in L4. Microzooplankton grazing rates on total Chl a were similar in both treatments; however, phytoplankton instantaneous growth rates were higher in the more illuminated mesocosm. This resulted in a closer coupling between both rates in L4, where all production was grazed daily, than in L1. Nevertheless, the overall flux of carbon through the microzooplankton was 33-60% higher in L1 compared to L4 throughout the experiment. The fraction of mixotrophy in the ciliate community varied in L1 (20-50%), but decreased over time in L4 from 50% to 30%. Our results do not support studies from freshwater, postulating that reduced light and nutrient limitation may increase herbivore production due to stoichiometric effects. Finally, we discuss how mixotrophy may bias rate estimates in dilution experiments.
AB - Plankton biomass and composition in the pelagic zone of oceans is exposed to changes in availability of light and nutrients due to large-scale ocean circulation and water column stratification. We hypothesized that displacement of plankton from surface to deeper darker waters would not only favor heterotrophy over time, as previously suggested, but also first rapidly affect the level of mixotrophy and, consequently, overall microbial grazing in plankton food webs. To test this in an oligotrophic marine system we incubated Eastern Mediterranean water (from 10m depth north of Crete in September 2010) in 2.8m 3 mesocosms simulating two different light intensities at the sampling station, surface waters (ca. 10m; mesocosms L1) and deeper layers (ca. 50-60m; mesocosms L4). The biomass and abundance of the main planktonic groups were monitored either daily or every second day, depending on the group. Microzooplankton grazing rates and the contribution of mixotrophic feeding were estimated by a combination of dilution experiments and incubations with live fluorescently labeled algae (LFLA). Although no nutrients were added to the mesocosms the chlorophyll a increased during the first 2days of the experiment in both treatments. This increase resulted from phytoplankton growth in the light L1-mesocosm (autotrophic biomass was ca. doubled in L1 compared to L4), but was mostly due to photoadaptation of the algae in the L4-mesocosm, as indicated by lower carbon to chlorophyll a ratios. By the end of the experiment, the total biomass of protozoan and metazoan grazers in L1 was ca. twofold higher than in L4. The microzooplankton responded within the first 24h, showing different grazing activity in L1 than in L4. Microzooplankton grazing rates on total Chl a were similar in both treatments; however, phytoplankton instantaneous growth rates were higher in the more illuminated mesocosm. This resulted in a closer coupling between both rates in L4, where all production was grazed daily, than in L1. Nevertheless, the overall flux of carbon through the microzooplankton was 33-60% higher in L1 compared to L4 throughout the experiment. The fraction of mixotrophy in the ciliate community varied in L1 (20-50%), but decreased over time in L4 from 50% to 30%. Our results do not support studies from freshwater, postulating that reduced light and nutrient limitation may increase herbivore production due to stoichiometric effects. Finally, we discuss how mixotrophy may bias rate estimates in dilution experiments.
KW - Dilution experiments
KW - Eastern Mediterranean
KW - Light
KW - Mesocosm
KW - Microzooplankton
KW - Mixotrophy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84861799745&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jembe.2012.05.005
DO - 10.1016/j.jembe.2012.05.005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84861799745
SN - 0022-0981
VL - 424-425
SP - 66
EP - 77
JO - Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
JF - Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
ER -