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Diversity,Ecology and Biogeochemistry of Cyst-Forming Acantharia (Radiolaria) in the Oceans
Authors:Johan Decelle  Patrick Martin  Katsiaryna Paborstava  David W Pond  Geraint Tarling  Frédéric Mahé  Colomban de Vargas  Richard Lampitt  Fabrice Not
Institution:1. CNRS, UMR 7144, EPPO, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Station Biologique de Roscoff - Place Georges Teissier, Roscoff, France.; 2. National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, United Kingdom.; 3. British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, United Kingdom.; Royal Netherlands Institute of Sea Research (NIOZ), The Netherlands,
Abstract:Marine planktonic organisms that undertake active vertical migrations over their life cycle are important contributors to downward particle flux in the oceans. Acantharia, globally distributed heterotrophic protists that are unique in building skeletons of celestite (strontium sulfate), can produce reproductive cysts covered by a heavy mineral shell that sink rapidly from surface to deep waters. We combined phylogenetic and biogeochemical analyses to explore the ecological and biogeochemical significance of this reproductive strategy. Phylogenetic analysis of the 18S and 28S rRNA genes of different cyst morphotypes collected in different oceans indicated that cyst-forming Acantharia belong to three early diverging and essentially non symbiotic clades from the orders Chaunacanthida and Holacanthida. Environmental high-throughput V9 tag sequences and clone libraries of the 18S rRNA showed that the three clades are widely distributed in the Indian, Atlantic and Pacific Oceans at different latitudes, but appear prominent in regions of higher primary productivity. Moreover, sequences of cyst-forming Acantharia were distributed evenly in both the photic and mesopelagic zone, a vertical distribution that we attribute to their life cycle where flagellated swarmers are released in deep waters from sinking cysts. Bathypelagic sediment traps in the subantarctic and oligotrophic subtropical Atlantic Ocean showed that downward flux of Acantharia was only large at high-latitudes and during a phytoplankton bloom. Their contribution to the total monthly particulate organic matter flux can represent up to 3%. High organic carbon export in cold waters would be a putative nutritional source for juveniles ascending in the water column. This study improves our understanding of the life cycle and biogeochemical contribution of Acantharia, and brings new insights into a remarkable reproductive strategy in marine protists.
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