Silicified cell walls as a defensive trait in diatoms.

Proc Biol Sci

Centre for Ocean Life, Technical University of Denmark, DTU Aqua , Kemitorvet B201, Kongens Lyngby 2800 , Denmark.

Published: April 2019


Article Synopsis

  • Diatoms are crucial for marine primary production, and their unique silica cell walls are the strongest biological material known.
  • Research shows that higher silica content in diatoms correlates with lower grazing by copepods, but these walls offer little defense against protozoan grazers.
  • The study indicates that while thicker silica walls work as an effective barrier against copepods, silica deposition decreases as diatom growth rates increase, suggesting a trade-off between defense and growth.

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Article Abstract

Diatoms contribute nearly half of the marine primary production. These microalgae differ from other phytoplankton groups in having a silicified cell wall, which is the strongest known biological material relative to its density. While it has been suggested that a siliceous wall may have evolved as a mechanical protection against grazing, empirical evidence of its defensive role is limited. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that grazing by adult copepods and nauplii on diatoms is approximately inversely proportional to their silica content, both within and among diatom species. While a sixfold increase in silica content leads to a fourfold decrease in copepod grazing, silicification provides no protection against protozoan grazers that directly engulf their prey. We also found that the wall provides limited protection to cells ingested by copepods, since less than 1% of consumed cells were alive in the faecal pellets. Moreover, silica deposition in diatoms decreases with increasing growth rates, suggesting a possible cost of defence. Overall, our results demonstrate that thickening of silica walls is an effective defence strategy against copepods. This suggests that the plasticity of silicification in diatoms may have evolved as a response to copepod grazing pressure, whose specialized tools to break silicified walls have coevolved with diatoms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6501939PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2019.0184DOI Listing

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