Fight and flight in dinoflagellates? : Kinetics of simultaneous grazer-induced responses in Alexandrium tamarense
Publication: Research - peer-review › Journal article – Annual report year: 2012
We monitored the kinetics of grazer-induced responses in the marine dinoflagellate Alexandrium tamarense.
Chemical cues from each of three calanoid copepods (Calanus sp., Centropages typicus, and Acartia tonsa)
induced increased toxicity and suppressed chain formation in A. tamarense. Both chemical and morphological
responses augmented over 3 d. Toxicity subsequently averaged 299% higher than controls, and average biovolume
24% lower than controls because of suppression of chain formation in grazed treatments. Grazer-induced toxicity
returned to control levels after approximately 11 d, equivalent to five cell divisions, and average biovolume
returned to control levels within 1 to 4 d (one to two cell divisions). This suggests that dinoflagellates
simultaneously reduce grazer encounter rates and increase chemical defense levels in the presence of copepod
grazers. Media replacement experiments showed that the inducing cue(s) attenuate rapidly in seawater, which
allows A. tamarense to adjust resource allocation to grazer-induced responses to follow fluctuations in grazer
density. Grazer-induced responses, however, develop too slowly to be accounted for in short-term grazing
experiments with laboratory cultures
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Limnology and Oceanography |
| Publication date | 2012 |
| Volume | 57 |
| Journal number | 1 |
| Pages | 58-64 |
| ISSN | 0024-3590 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published |
| Citations | Web of Science® Times Cited: 1 |
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ID: 6375242