Warming Fluctuations Strengthen the Photo-Phagotrophic Coupling in Mixoplanktonic Protists
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Jabalera Cabrerizo, Marco; González-Olalla, Juan Manuel; Medina-Sánchez, Juan Manuel; Vila Duplá, María; Carrillo Lechuga, PresentaciónEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Carbon use efficiency Electron transport rates Jensen inequality
Fecha
2025-11-18Referencia bibliográfica
Cabrerizo, M.J., González-Olalla, J.M., Medina-Sánchez, J.M. et al. Warming Fluctuations Strengthen the Photo-Phagotrophic Coupling in Mixoplanktonic Protists. Microb Ecol 88, 138 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00248-025-02658-2
Patrocinador
MICIN/AEI - ERDF (PID2020-118872RB-I00 “REMOLADOX”; PID2022-136280NAI00 “TITAN”); MICIU/AEI - ESF+ (RYC2023-042504-I); MCIN/AEI - Unión Europea NextGeneration EU, PRTR (TED2021-131262B-I00 “MIXOPLASCLIM”); Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (FPU19/05924); Junta de Andalucía (DGP-POST-2024-00283)Resumen
Mixoplankton, a major trophic group in aquatic ecosystems, are being affected by global warming. However, most studies
on temperature effects use constant mean conditions, overlooking how short-term thermal fluctuations could deviate from
climate projections and impact this group. We experimentally quantified how increasing amplitudes of warming fluctuation
(±1, 3, and 5 °C) alter carbon-specific electron transport (ETRc
), net photosynthesis (Pc
), respiration (Rc
), phagotrophy
(Phc
), carbon use efficiency (CUE), and growth (µ) in four protist species (three mixoplanktonic and one strict phototroph).
We observed a consistent positive link between photosynthetic efficiency (Pc
:ETRc
ratio) and Phc
, and a shift towards a
strengthening of the phagotrophy (Pc
:ETRc
/ Phc
ratio) with greater thermal fluctuation. A potential explanation is a selective behavior aimed to increase phagotrophy to obtain inorganic nutrients through ingested prey internal re-cycling rather
than relying on the environment, to support an enhanced photosynthetic efficiency and growth. An enhanced, coupled
photo-phagotrophy activity could boost mixoplankton competitiveness compared to phytoplankton. Our findings underscore the need to incorporate trophic flexibility and its interaction with environmental variability into trait-based models
to better predict community dynamics, biogeochemical cycling, and food web structure in aquatic ecosystems.





