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AME 24:297-311 (2001)
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Abstract
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Planktonic ciliates in the oligotrophic Mediterranean Sea: longitudinal trends of standing stocks, distributions and analysis of food vacuole contents
Paraskevi Pitta1,*, Antonia Giannakourou2, Urania Christaki2
1Institute of Marine Biology of Crete, PO Box 2214, 71003 Heraklion, Crete, Greece
2National Centre for Marine Research, Aghios Kosmas, 16604 Hellinikon, Greece
*E-mail: vpitta@imbc.gr
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ABSTRACT: Vertical distribution, standing stocks, size-class structure, community structure, mixotrophy and cell content of ciliate assemblages were studied at 9 stations along a transect in the Mediterranean Sea in June 1999. The aim of the study was to
relate the trophic conditions in the Mediterranean to the ciliate community structure and the grazing impact of ciliates. The vertical distribution was more or less uniform in the Eastern Basin but presented an extended upper layer with higher density and
a maximum at 50 to 75 m in the Western Basin. The integrated abundance (11.2 to 26.9 ¥ 106 cells m-2) and biomass (41.5 to 84.8 mg C m-2) decreased by a factor of 2 from west to east. A total of
55 tintinnid species were identified. Aloricates <30 µm represented 62% of integrated abundance and 16% of biomass. Mixotrophs made up 17% of integrated abundance and 18% of biomass. From west to east, there was no evident change in the structure of
the ciliate community with respect to (1) aloricate size-classes, (2) mixotroph size-classes, (3) contribution of mixotrophs to total abundance. The cell content of all ciliates was examined for Synechococcus and photosynthetic algae under
epifluorescence inverted microscopy. Tintinnids contained similar quantities of algae and Synechococcus (1.04 ± 0.59 algae tintinnid-1, 0.94 ± 0.87 Synechococcus tintinnid-1) and the same was true for aloricates. Based
on cell content, it was estimated that (1) the ingestion rate for tintinnids was: 0.61 photosynthetic algae h-1 and 0.41 Synechococcus h-1 and for aloricates: 0.14 photosynthetic algae h-1 and 0.13
Synechococcus h-1; (2) tintinnids ingested significantly more prey than aloricates by a factor of 5; and (3) ciliates consumed 26% of primary production in the Western, 41% in the Central and 70% in the Eastern Basin.
KEY WORDS: Planktonic ciliates · Mediterranean · Distributions · Mixotrophy· Size classes · Cell content
Full text in pdf format
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Published in AME Vol.
24, No. 3
(2001) on July 18
ISSN: 0948-3055.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 2001
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