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  4. Kleptoplast distribution, photosynthetic efficiency and sequestration mechanisms in intertidal benthic foraminifera
 
research article

Kleptoplast distribution, photosynthetic efficiency and sequestration mechanisms in intertidal benthic foraminifera

Jesus, Bruno
•
Jauffrais, Thierry
•
Trampe, Erik C. L.
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2022
Isme Journal

Foraminifera are ubiquitously distributed in marine habitats, playing a major role in marine sediment carbon sequestration and the nitrogen cycle. They exhibit a wide diversity of feeding and behavioural strategies (heterotrophy, autotrophy and mixotrophy), including species with the ability of sequestering intact functional chloroplasts from their microalgal food source (kleptoplastidy), resulting in a mixotrophic lifestyle. The mechanisms by which kleptoplasts are integrated and kept functional inside foraminiferal cytosol are poorly known. In our study, we investigated relationships between feeding strategies, kleptoplast spatial distribution and photosynthetic functionality in two shallow-water benthic foraminifera (Haynesina germanica and Elphidium williamsoni), both species feeding on benthic diatoms. We used a combination of observations of foraminiferal feeding behaviour, test morphology, cytological TEM-based observations and HPLC pigment analysis, with non-destructive, single-cell level imaging of kleptoplast spatial distribution and PSII quantum efficiency. The two species showed different feeding strategies, with H. germanica removing diatom content at the foraminifer's apertural region and E. williamsoni on the dorsal site. All E. williamsoni parameters showed that this species has higher autotrophic capacity albeit both feeding on benthic diatoms. This might represent two different stages in the evolutionary process of establishing a permanent symbiotic relationship, or may reflect different trophic strategies.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41396-021-01128-0
Web of Science ID

WOS:000706049900001

Author(s)
Jesus, Bruno
Jauffrais, Thierry
Trampe, Erik C. L.
Goessling, Johannes W.
Lekieffre, Charlotte
Meibom, Anders  
Kuhl, Michael
Geslin, Emmanuelle
Date Issued

2022

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE

Published in
Isme Journal
Volume

16

Start page

822

End page

832

Subjects

Ecology

•

Microbiology

•

Environmental Sciences & Ecology

•

elphidium-excavatum terquem

•

haynesina-germanica

•

sequestered chloroplasts

•

retention

•

plastids

•

algae

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cycle

•

photoprotection

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denitrification

•

performance

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LGB  
Available on Infoscience
October 23, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/182547
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