The Eastern mudsnail, Ilyanassa obsoleta, was attracted to, consumed, and digested resting cysts of the dinoflagellate Scrippsiella lachrymosa when cysts were presented in grazing experiments. Twenty snails were observed individually for one hour in petri dishes divided into four parts wherein cysts were present in one quadrant, sediment particles of the same size range were in another quadrant, and two quadrants were free of particles. Actively foraging snails were nearly twice as likely to be found in quadrants containing S. lachrymosa cysts as in the other quadrants until cysts were consumed. Microscope observations of fecal pellets from snails feeding on cysts revealed digestive destruction of the cysts. These findings indicate that deposit-feeding grazers can actively seek dinoflagellate cysts as a food item, thereby influencing distribution of cysts and subsequent germination of dinoflagellate vegetative cells.
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1 January 2008
The Eastern Mudsnail, Ilyanassa obsoleta, Actively Forages For, Consumes, And Digests Cysts Of The Dinoflagellate, Scrippsiella lachrymosa
Agneta Persson,
Barry C. Smith,
Mark S. Dixon,
Gary H. Wikfors
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Malacologia
Vol. 50 • No. 1-2
January 2008
Vol. 50 • No. 1-2
January 2008
cyst ecology
deposit feeding
dinoflagellate resting stages