Biology:Mesodinium

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Short description: Genus of single-celled organisms


Mesodinium
Mesodinium species.png
Mesodinium species containing green plastids taken from cryptophyte prey[1]
Scientific classification
Domain:
Eukaryota
(unranked):
(unranked):
Alveolata
Phylum:
Ciliophora
Class:
Order:
Cyclotrichiida
Family:
Mesodiniidae
Genus:
Mesodinium
Species

Mesodinium is a genus of ciliates that are widely distributed and are abundant in marine and brackish waters.[2][3]

Currently, six marine species of Mesodinium have been described and grouped by nutritional mode: plastidic (M. chamaeleon, M. coatsi, M. major, and M. rubrum) or heterotrophic (M. pulex and M. pupula). There is some debate as to whether the nutritional mode of plastidic Mesodinium species is phototrophic (permanent plastid) or mixotrophic.[4][5] Among the plastidic species, wild M. major and M. rubrum populations possess red plastids belonging to genera Teleaulax, Plagioselmis, and Geminigera,[6][7][8] while wild M. chamaeleon and M. coatsi populations normally contain green plastids.[9][10][11] The availability of suitable cryptophyte prey is important for bloom formation of plastidic Mesodinium species.[1]

The most common species, Mesodinium rubrum, causes red tides in many coastal ecosystems. Although M. rubrum is known as a nontoxic species,[12] blooms of the ciliate can be potentially harmful to aquaculture industries.[13][14][1] M. rubrum photosynthesizes by sequestering the nucleus of its cryptophyte prey, in order to maintain stolen plastids and other organelles.[15] In this way, the genus Mesodinium plays an important role in linking cryptophycean prey and diverse predators in the aquatic microbial food web. For example, the dinoflagellates Dinophysis spp., which are a predator of M. rubrum and the source of their cryptophyte-derived plastids, have been frequently observed to precede or to coincide with high densities of M. rubrum.[16][17][18][19][1]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Nishitani, G. and Yamaguchi, M. (2018) "Seasonal succession of ciliate Mesodinium spp. with red, green, or mixed plastids and their association with cryptophyte prey". Scientific reports, 8(1): 1–9. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-35629-4. CC-BY icon.svg Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  2. Leppanen, J. M. & Bruun, J. E. (1986) The role of pelagic ciliates including the autotrophic Mesodinium rubrum during the spring bloom of 1982 in the open northern Baltic proper. Ophelia 4, 147–157.
  3. Sanders, R. W. (1995) Seasonal distributions of the photosynthesizing ciliates Laboea strobila and Myrionecta rubra (=Mesodinium rubrum) in an estuary of the Gulf of Maine. Aquat. Microb. Ecol. 9, 237–242.
  4.  , Wikidata Q30826949
  5.  , Wikidata Q42320407
  6.  , Wikidata Q24629387
  7.  , Wikidata Q57272516
  8.  , Wikidata Q46343430
  9.  , Wikidata Q34282405
  10.  , Wikidata Q34030100
  11.  , Wikidata Q30837739
  12. Lindholm, T. (1985) Mesodinium rubrum–a unique photosynthetic ciliate. Adv. Aquat. Microbiol. 3, 1–48.
  13. Hayes, G. C., Purdie, D. A. & Williams, J. A. (1989) The distribution of ichthyoplankton in Southampton Water in response to low oxygen levels produced by a Mesodinium rubrum bloom. J. Fish Biol. 34, 811–813.
  14. Liu, H. et al. (2012) Potential risk of Mesodinium rubrum bloom in the aquaculture area of Dapeng’ao cove, China: diurnal changes in the ciliate community structure in the surface water. Oceanologia 54, 109–117.
  15.  , Wikidata Q34606048
  16. Mouritsen, L. T. & Richardson, K. (2003) Vertical microscale patchiness in nano- and microplankton distributions in a stratifed estuary. J. Plankton Res. 25, 783–797.
  17.  , Wikidata Q51598919
  18. Lips, U. & Lips, I. (2014) Bimodal distribution patterns of motile phytoplankton in relation to physical processes and stratification (Gulf of Finland, Baltic Sea). Deep-Sea Res. II. 101, 107–119.
  19.  , Wikidata Q60507600

Wikidata ☰ Q25360922 entry