Abundance of thraustochytrids in coastal plankton

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Abstract

The abundance of thraustochytrids was investigated in and off the Seto Inland Sea, Japan. Thraustochytrid cells were stained with acriflavine and counted directly by epifluorescence microscopy. Thraustochytrids were present in the water column at a destiny of 2.1 x 103 to 5.6 x 104 cells 1-1, with an overall average of 1.0 x 104 cells 1-1, which was about 10-5 to 10-6 of the bacterioplankton abundance. In contrast to the low abundance of thraustochytrids, their biovolume was estimated to compose a not negligible fraction of marine microbiota, corresponding to about 3 to 43% of the bacterioplankton biovolume. Thus, it is suggested that thraustochytrids play an ecological role as alternative food sources for picoplankton feeders, as well as being active degraders and consumers in aquatic microbial food chains.

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APA

Naganuma, T., Takasugi, H., & Kimura, H. (1998). Abundance of thraustochytrids in coastal plankton. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 162, 105–110. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps162105

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