Rhizaria are unexpectedly abundant and exhibit taxonomic and trophic diversity in the eastern subarctic Pacific

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Abstract

Rhizaria are a diverse supergroup of large marine protists that are often overlooked due to their fragility, lower abundances, and wide size range relative to other plankton. Despite their global distribution, Rhizaria ecology and biogeography is poorly understood due to a paucity of datasets and use of differing methodologies. Here we present the first characterization of Rhizaria ecology in the northern Gulf of Alaska (NGA), a variable yet productive subarctic ecosystem with important fisheries that is experiencing long-term warming. Seawater samples were collected from CTD-secured Niskin bottles at stations within the NGA Long-Term Ecological Research study area during summer 2023. We report some of the highest Rhizaria abundances (25 cells L-1) from any ocean environment to date and thus suggest a restructuring of the current biogeographical paradigm that posits highest abundances at the equator and decreases at higher latitudes. Acantharia was the most ubiquitous subgroup. Distinct depth niches were also revealed: Foraminifera dominated surface waters, Radiolaria exhibited a cosmopolitan distribution, and Phaeodaria were the deepest living. Prey captures and algal interactions primarily occurred offshore in the upper water column. A wide range of taxa had captured prey while the hosts to presumptively symbiotic algae were mainly Foraminifera and Acantharia. We highlight Rhizaria as key players in NGA food web dynamics as evidenced by their wide depth distributions, taxonomic diversity, and variable nutrition strategies.

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