4.7 Article

The Thiamine Content of Phytoplankton Cells Is Affected by Abiotic Stress and Growth Rate

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue 3, Pages 566-577

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-012-0156-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. [Formas 21.9/2003-1033]
  2. [Formas 21.0/2004-0313]
  3. [EU Strukturstod FiV Dnr 231-0692-04]

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Thiamine (vitamin B-1) is produced by many plants, algae and bacteria, but by higher trophic levels, it must be acquired through the diet. We experimentally investigated how the thiamine content of six phytoplankton species belonging to five different phyla is affected by abiotic stress caused by changes in temperature, salinity and photon flux density. Correlations between growth rate and thiamine content per cell were negative for the five eukaryotic species, but not for the cyanobacterium Nodularia spumigena. We demonstrate a high variability in thiamine content among phytoplankton species, with the highest content in N. spumigena. Salinity was the factor with the strongest effect, followed by temperature and photon flux density, although the responses varied between the investigated phytoplankton species. Our results suggest that regime shifts in phytoplankton community composition through large-scale environmental changes has the potential to alter the thiamine availability for higher trophic levels. A decreased access to this essential vitamin may have serious consequences for aquatic food webs.

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