Video plankton recorder reveals high abundances of colonial Radiolaria in surface waters of the central North Pacific |
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Authors: | Dennett, Mark R. Caron, David A. Michaels, Anthony F. Gallager, Scott M. Davis, Cabell S. |
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Affiliation: | 1 Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Ma 02543, Usa, 2 Department Of Biological Sciences, 3616 Trousdale Parkway, University Of Southern California, Los Angeles, Ca 90080371, Usa |
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Abstract: | ![]() Colonial spumellarian Radiolaria are heterotrophic protiststhat form large (up to several meters in length), gelatinousstructures in the surface waters of all tropical and subtropicaloceanic ecosystems. These species are morphologically and trophicallycomplex and some, but not all, produce silica skeletal structuresof considerable paleontological significance. Skeletonless speciesof Radiolaria are poorly sampled by plankton nets, which canseverely damage these delicate organisms. Therefore, abundancesof colonial Radiolaria typically have been underestimated inquantitative studies of zooplankton abundance and biomass. Herewe document the abundances of colonial Radiolaria in the centralNorth Pacific based on analysis of video images from a miniaturizedvideo plankton recorder. We observed abundances of radiolariancells in colonies that exceeded previous reports of total Radiolariaby more than ten-fold, and counts of skeleton-bearing Radiolariaby more than two to three orders of magnitude. Biomass (carbon)within these colonies was similar to or greater than the totalradiolarian biomass (i.e. including all solitary species) previouslyreported for the Pacific. Symbiont productivity within colonialRadiolaria was estimated to constitute a modest but significantfraction of total primary productivity (up to |
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