RESTING CYSTS FROM COASTAL MARINE PLANKTON

Coastal plankton show fluctuations in abundance and species composition. Resting stage (cyst) production is a common strategy adopted by hundreds of plankton species to ensure reproduction and to avoid adverse conditions. During the resting period, these species are normally absent from the water co...

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Main Authors: Belmonte, G, Rubino, F
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: CRC PRESS-TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11587/445796
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spelling ftunivsalento:oai:iris.unisalento.it:11587/445796 2024-04-14T08:19:17+00:00 RESTING CYSTS FROM COASTAL MARINE PLANKTON Belmonte, G Rubino, F Belmonte, G Rubino, F 2019 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11587/445796 eng eng CRC PRESS-TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP country:GBR place:6000 BROKEN SOUND PARKWAY NW, STE 300, BOCA RATON, FL 33487-2742 USA info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000535123100002 ispartofbook:OCEANOGRAPHY AND MARINE BIOLOGY volume:57 firstpage:1 lastpage:88 numberofpages:88 http://hdl.handle.net/11587/445796 info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart 2019 ftunivsalento 2024-03-21T18:18:29Z Coastal plankton show fluctuations in abundance and species composition. Resting stage (cyst) production is a common strategy adopted by hundreds of plankton species to ensure reproduction and to avoid adverse conditions. During the resting period, these species are normally absent from the water column, and cysts produced in the plankton accumulate in the sediment where they wait for the return of suitable conditions. A portion of the cyst bank does not hatch, instead undergoing a dormancy that may extend for decades. Confined coastal areas accumulate cysts in sediment due to one or more possibilities, including reduced water movement/hydrodynamics, high population density, abundance of cyst-producing species, and the absence or scarcity of possible cyst consumers in the benthos. The pelagic-benthic nexus, which affects both the sediment and the water column (and possibly sea ice) is still poorly understood. In fact, the presence of cysts in the life cycle of organisms is likely to have considerable consequences for the ecology of coastal plankton, as well as the evolution and biogeography of species. This review aims to depict the presence (and even abundance) of resting stages in marine environments and their impact on ecosystem functioning. The review starts with a description of encysted resting stages in all marine planktonic taxa, listing a total of 501 species with known cysts, and methods and tools for their collection and study. The physiology and timing of the rest period is then described for various taxa, followed by a discussion of the evolutionary implications of resting. The presence of encysted stages in different realms and phyla of plankton suggests an ancient origin and a successive diversification of morphologies that, today, roughly characterise each taxa. Ecological and biogeographical implications stem from this general framework and support the hypothesis of seasonal occurrences of planktonic life in ecosystems where productivity is suspended for a long time (e.g. in polar seas). The ... Book Part Sea ice Università del Salento: CINECA IRIS
institution Open Polar
collection Università del Salento: CINECA IRIS
op_collection_id ftunivsalento
language English
description Coastal plankton show fluctuations in abundance and species composition. Resting stage (cyst) production is a common strategy adopted by hundreds of plankton species to ensure reproduction and to avoid adverse conditions. During the resting period, these species are normally absent from the water column, and cysts produced in the plankton accumulate in the sediment where they wait for the return of suitable conditions. A portion of the cyst bank does not hatch, instead undergoing a dormancy that may extend for decades. Confined coastal areas accumulate cysts in sediment due to one or more possibilities, including reduced water movement/hydrodynamics, high population density, abundance of cyst-producing species, and the absence or scarcity of possible cyst consumers in the benthos. The pelagic-benthic nexus, which affects both the sediment and the water column (and possibly sea ice) is still poorly understood. In fact, the presence of cysts in the life cycle of organisms is likely to have considerable consequences for the ecology of coastal plankton, as well as the evolution and biogeography of species. This review aims to depict the presence (and even abundance) of resting stages in marine environments and their impact on ecosystem functioning. The review starts with a description of encysted resting stages in all marine planktonic taxa, listing a total of 501 species with known cysts, and methods and tools for their collection and study. The physiology and timing of the rest period is then described for various taxa, followed by a discussion of the evolutionary implications of resting. The presence of encysted stages in different realms and phyla of plankton suggests an ancient origin and a successive diversification of morphologies that, today, roughly characterise each taxa. Ecological and biogeographical implications stem from this general framework and support the hypothesis of seasonal occurrences of planktonic life in ecosystems where productivity is suspended for a long time (e.g. in polar seas). The ...
author2 Belmonte, G
Rubino, F
format Book Part
author Belmonte, G
Rubino, F
spellingShingle Belmonte, G
Rubino, F
RESTING CYSTS FROM COASTAL MARINE PLANKTON
author_facet Belmonte, G
Rubino, F
author_sort Belmonte, G
title RESTING CYSTS FROM COASTAL MARINE PLANKTON
title_short RESTING CYSTS FROM COASTAL MARINE PLANKTON
title_full RESTING CYSTS FROM COASTAL MARINE PLANKTON
title_fullStr RESTING CYSTS FROM COASTAL MARINE PLANKTON
title_full_unstemmed RESTING CYSTS FROM COASTAL MARINE PLANKTON
title_sort resting cysts from coastal marine plankton
publisher CRC PRESS-TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11587/445796
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000535123100002
ispartofbook:OCEANOGRAPHY AND MARINE BIOLOGY
volume:57
firstpage:1
lastpage:88
numberofpages:88
http://hdl.handle.net/11587/445796
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