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Nanoplanktonic diatoms are globally overlooked but play a role in spring blooms and carbon export. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Diatoms are crucial primary producers in oceans, contributing to about 20% of Earth’s photosynthetically fixed carbon, but many small species are often overlooked.
  • Large diatoms are typically represented in marine models, while the smaller nanophytoplankton and picoplanktonic diatoms are underrepresented due to their minuscule size and detection difficulties.
  • A recent discovery of a spring bloom of the small diatom species Minidiscus in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea suggests the need to reassess their ecological roles, indicating they can contribute significantly to marine food webs and carbon cycling.

Article Abstract

Diatoms are one of the major primary producers in the ocean, responsible annually for ~20% of photosynthetically fixed CO on Earth. In oceanic models, they are typically represented as large (>20 µm) microphytoplankton. However, many diatoms belong to the nanophytoplankton (2-20 µm) and a few species even overlap with the picoplanktonic size-class (<2 µm). Due to their minute size and difficulty of detection they are poorly characterized. Here we describe a massive spring bloom of the smallest known diatom (Minidiscus) in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea. Analysis of Tara Oceans data, together with literature review, reveal a general oversight of the significance of these small diatoms at the global scale. We further evidence that they can reach the seafloor at high sinking rates, implying the need to revise our classical binary vision of pico- and nanoplanktonic cells fueling the microbial loop, while only microphytoplankton sustain secondary trophic levels and carbon export.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5838239PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03376-9DOI Listing

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