Temporal Variability and Ecological Interactions of Parasitic Marine Syndiniales in Coastal Protist Communities
2020; American Society for Microbiology; Volume: 5; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1128/msphere.00209-20
ISSN2379-5042
AutoresSean R. Anderson, Elizabeth L. Harvey,
Tópico(s)Environmental DNA in Biodiversity Studies
ResumoProtist parasites in the marine alveolate group, Syndiniales, have been observed within infected plankton host cells for decades, and recently, global-scale efforts (Tara Ocean exploration) have confirmed their importance within microbial communities. Yet, protist parasites remain enigmatic, particularly with respect to their temporal dynamics and parasite-host interactions. We employed weekly 18S amplicon surveys over a full year in a coastal estuary, revealing strong temporal shifts in Syndiniales parasites, with highest relative abundance during warmer summer to fall months. Though influenced by temperature, Syndiniales population dynamics were also driven by a high frequency of biological interactions with other protist groups, as determined through co-occurrence network analysis. Parasitic interactions implied by the network highlighted a range of confirmed (dinoflagellates) and putative (diatoms) interactions and suggests parasites may be less selective in their preferred hosts. Understanding parasite-host dynamics over space and time will improve our ability to include parasitism as a loss term in microbial food web models.
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