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Fungal parasitism on diatoms alters formation and bio-physical properties of sinking aggregates

Klawonn Isabell; Van den Wyngaert Silke; Iversen Morten H; Walles Tim JW; Flintrop Clara M; Cisternas-Novoa Carolina; Nejstgaard Jens C; Kagami Maiko; Grossart Hans P

Fungal parasitism on diatoms alters formation and bio-physical properties of sinking aggregates

Klawonn Isabell
Van den Wyngaert Silke
Iversen Morten H
Walles Tim JW
Flintrop Clara M
Cisternas-Novoa Carolina
Nejstgaard Jens C
Kagami Maiko
Grossart Hans P
Katso/Avaa
s42003-023-04453-6.pdf (1.375Mb)
Lataukset: 

NATURE PORTFOLIO
doi:10.1038/s42003-023-04453-6
URI
https://www.nature.com/articles/s42003-023-04453-6
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2023040635277
Tiivistelmä
Phytoplankton forms the base of aquatic food webs and element cycling in diverse aquatic systems. The fate of phytoplankton-derived organic matter, however, often remains unresolved as it is controlled by complex, interlinked remineralization and sedimentation processes. We here investigate a rarely considered control mechanism on sinking organic matter fluxes: fungal parasites infecting phytoplankton. We demonstrate that bacterial colonization is promoted 3.5-fold on fungal-infected phytoplankton cells in comparison to non-infected cells in a cultured model pathosystem (diatom Synedra, fungal microparasite Zygophlyctis, and co-growing bacteria), and even >= 17-fold in field-sampled populations (Planktothrix, Synedra, and Fragilaria). Additional data obtained using the Synedra-Zygophlyctis model system reveals that fungal infections reduce the formation of aggregates. Moreover, carbon respiration is 2-fold higher and settling velocities are 11-48% lower for similar-sized fungal-infected vs. non-infected aggregates. Our data imply that parasites can effectively control the fate of phytoplankton-derived organic matter on a single-cell to single-aggregate scale, potentially enhancing remineralization and reducing sedimentation in freshwater and coastal systems.Fungal parasites are found to effectively control the fate of phytoplankton-derived organic matter, potentially enhancing remineralization and reducing sedimentation in freshwater and coastal systems.
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