4.8 Article

Osmotrophy of dissolved organic compounds by coccolithophore populations: Fixation into particulate organic and inorganic carbon

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 9, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adf6973

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Some coccolithophores have strategies for acquiring carbon in sub-euphotic environments with insufficient light for photosynthesis. Field experiments in the northwest Atlantic showed that these coccolithophores have slow uptake rates of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), suggesting that osmotrophy plays a role in survival in low-light situations.
Coccolithophores are typically thought of as photoautotrophs, yet a few genera inhabit sub-euphotic environments with insufficient light for photosynthesis, suggesting that other carbon acquisition strategies are likely. Field experiments were performed in the northwest Atlantic (a region with potentially abundant coccolithophores). Phytoplankton populations were incubated with 14C-labeled dissolved organic carbon (DOC) compounds, acetate, mannitol, and glycerol. Coccolithophores were sorted from these populations 24 hours later using flow cytometry, and DOC uptake was measured. DOC uptake rates were as high as 10-15 moles cell-1 day-1, slow relative to photosynthesis rates (10-12 moles cell-1 day-1). Growth rates on the organic compounds were low, suggesting that osmotrophy plays more of a survival strategy in low-light situations. Assimilated DOC was found in both particulate organic carbon and calcite coccoliths (particulate inorganic carbon), suggesting that osmotrophic uptake of DOC into coccolithophore calcite isa small but notable part of the biological carbon pump and alkalinity pump paradigms.

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