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Plasticity and Multiplicity of Trophic Modes in the Dinoflagellate Karlodinium and Their Pertinence to Population Maintenance and Bloom Dynamics

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jmse9010051

Keywords

Karlodinium; trophic modes; phagotrophy; mixotrophy

Funding

  1. Key Deployment Project of Centre for Ocean MegaResearch of Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences [COMS2019Q09]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [41776125, 41976134, 61533011]

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With the increasing documentation of mixotrophic protists, mixoplankton has emerged as a new paradigm and research hotspot in aquatic plankton ecology. Among mixoplankton, dinoflagellates are a dominant group and Karlodinium species have been intensively studied for their phagotrophic trophic modes, which exhibit characteristics such as omnivority, flexibility in phagotrophic mechanisms, and cannibalism. However, further research is needed on the trophic modes of recently described and less studied species within the genus Karlodinium.
As the number of mixotrophic protists has been increasingly documented, mixoplankton, a third category separated from the traditional categorization of plankton into phytoplankton and zooplankton, has become a new paradigm and research hotspot in aquatic plankton ecology. While species of dinoflagellates are a dominant group among all recorded members of mixoplankton, the trophic modes of Karlodinium, a genus constituted of cosmopolitan toxic species, were reviewed due to their representative features as mixoplankton and harmful algal blooms (HABs)-causing dinoflagellates. Among at least 15 reported species in the genus, three have been intensively studied for their trophic modes, and all found to be phagotrophic. Their phagotrophy exhibits multiple characteristics: (1) omnivority, i.e., they can ingest a variety of preys in many forms; (2) flexibility in phagotrophic mechanisms, i.e., they can ingest small preys by direct engulfment and much bigger preys by myzocytosis using a peduncle; (3) cannibalism, i.e., species including at least K. veneficum can ingest the dead cells of their own species. However, for some recently described and barely studied species, their tropical modes still need to be investigated further regarding all of the above-mentioned aspects. Mixotrophy of Karlodinium plays a significant role in the population dynamics and the formation of HABs in many ways, which thus deserves further investigation in the aspects of physiological ecology, environmental triggers (e.g., levels of inorganic nutrients and/or presence of preys), energetics, molecular (genes and gene expression regulations) and biochemical (e.g., relevant enzymes and signal molecules) bases, origins, and evaluation of the advantages of being a phagotroph.

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