Mixotrophic dinoflagellate Karlodinium veneficum under variable nitrogen:phosphorus stoichiometry: feeding responses and effects on larvae of the eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica)

Chihhsien Lin, Graduate Research Assistant (PhD), University of Maryland Center For Environmental Science-Horn Point Laboratory, Cambridge, MD, United States, Stefano Accoroni, PostDoc, Dipartimento di Scienze della Vita e dell’Ambiente, Università Politecnica delle Marche, Ancona, Italy and Patricia M Glibert, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Horn Point Laboratory, Cambridge, MD, United States
Abstract:
Mixotrophic grazing activity can be promoted in response to nutrient-enriched prey and this nutritional strategy is thought to be a factor in promoting growth of some toxic microalgae under nutrient limiting conditions for the mixotroph. However, it is unclear how the nutritional condition of the predator or the prey affects mixotrophic metabolism and, consequently, potential effects on the mixotroph that may, in turn, affect early life stages of bivalves. In laboratory experiments, we measured the grazing rate of the Karlodinium veneficum on Rhodomonas salina as prey, under varied nitrogen (N): phosphorus (P) stoichiometry of both predator and prey, and we compared the nutritionally-regulated effects of K. veneficum on larvae of the eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginia). Nutritionally sufficient, N-deficient, and P-deficient K. veneficum at two growth stages (exponential and stationary) were mixed with nutritionally sufficient, N-deficient, and P-deficient R. salina, in a factorial experimental design. Regardless of the nutritional condition of K. veneficum, it showed significantly higher grazing rates with N-rich prey in exponential stage and P-rich prey in stationary stage. Maximum grazing rates of N-deficient K. veneficum on N-rich prey in exponential stage were ~20-fold larger than those nutritionally sufficient K. veneficum on N-rich prey. Significantly increased larval mortality was observed in 2-day exposures to monocultures of P-deficient K. veneficum at both stages. When mixed with P-deficient (or N-rich) prey, the presence of K. veneficum resulted in significantly enhanced larval mortality, but this was not the case for N-deficient K. veneficum in exponential stage. Mixotrophic feeding for K. veneficum may not only provide nutrition flexibility needed to persist bloom but appears to increase the negative effects of K. veneficum on the survival of oyster larvae.