Paradox of the plankton

In aquatic biology, the paradox of the plankton describes the situation in which a limited range of resources supports an unexpectedly wide range of plankton species, apparently flouting the competitive exclusion principle, which holds that when two species compete for the same resource, one will be driven to extinction.

Marine diatoms are among the many planktonic organisms that paradoxically appear to flout the competitive exclusion principle.

Ecological paradox

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The paradox of the plankton results from the clash between the observed diversity of plankton and the competitive exclusion principle,[1] also known as Gause's law,[2] which states that, when two species compete for the same resource, ultimately only one will persist and the other will be driven to extinction. Coexistence between two such species is impossible because the dominant one will inevitably deplete the shared resources, thus decimating the inferior population.[3] Phytoplankton life is diverse at all phylogenetic levels despite the limited range of resources (e.g. light, nitrate, phosphate, silicic acid, iron) for which they compete amongst themselves. The paradox of the plankton was originally described in 1961 by G. Evelyn Hutchinson, who proposed that the paradox could be resolved by factors such as vertical gradients of light or turbulence, symbiosis or commensalism, differential predation, or constantly changing environmental conditions.[4]

Later studies found that the paradox can be resolved by factors such as: zooplankton grazing pressure;[5] chaotic fluid motion;[6] size-selective grazing;[7] spatio-temporal heterogeneity;[8] bacterial mediation;[9] or environmental fluctuations.[10] In general, researchers suggest that ecological and environmental factors continually interact such that the planktonic habitat never reaches an equilibrium for which a single species is favoured.[11]

While it was long assumed that turbulence disrupts plankton patches at spatial scales less than a few metres, researchers using small-scale analysis of plankton distribution found that these exhibited patches of aggregation (on the order of 10cm) that had sufficient lifetimes (more than 10 minutes) to enable plankton grazing, competition, and infection.[12]

Resolution by viral lysis

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In the lytic cycle, viruses reproduce in host cells to manufacture more viruses; the viruses then burst out of the cell.

One potential resolution to the paradox is the control on plankton populations by marine lytic viruses. Marine viruses play an important role in bacteria and plankton ecology. They are a significant component of biogeochemical cycling[13] and horizontal gene transfer in both bacterial and plankton communities. Viruses are the most abundant organisms in the ocean, and have the capacity to deplete host populations very rapidly. Marine viruses infect specific host species, and therefore an abundance of a virus can quickly and effectively alter the structure of the phytoplankton and bacterial communities. Via the lytic cycle, a virus encounters a host and reproduces until the cell bursts, releasing viruses. Viruses can also enter a lysogenic cycle, in which the virus writes its DNA into the host genome. When a phytoplankton species enters a bloom period, cell concentration increases and many viral _targets suddenly become available.[14]

One explanation to the paradox of the plankton is the "Boom-and-busted dynamic" hypothesis, also called "Kill the winner." In a phytoplankton bloom, an individual species multiplies rapidly in ideal conditions, which increases its cell concentration in an area, outcompeting other phytoplankton. This "boom" in host cells creates an opportunity for rapid infection by viruses, leading to a "bust" in which the phytoplankton population rapidly diminishes. This creates a large gap in the local phytoplankton ecology and allows other species to fill in and continue growing. Such population control by viruses creates temporal and spatial diversity in phytoplankton communities. Long term control results, as the virus prevents the formerly dominant species from booming during future bloom events.[15]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Hardin, G. (1960). "The Competitive Exclusion Principle". Science. 131 (3409): 1292–1297. Bibcode:1960Sci...131.1292H. doi:10.1126/science.131.3409.1292. PMID 14399717.
  2. ^ Gause, G. F. (1932). "Experimental Studies on the Struggle for Existence - I. Mixed Population of Two Species of Yeast". Journal of Experimental Biology. 9: 389–402. doi:10.1242/jeb.9.4.389.
  3. ^ Johnson, Christopher A.; Bronstein, Judith L. (2019). "Coexistence and competitive exclusion in mutualism". Ecology. 100 (6): e02708. Bibcode:2019Ecol..100E2708J. doi:10.1002/ecy.2708. hdl:10150/633609. ISSN 1939-9170. PMID 30924140. S2CID 85565692.
  4. ^ Hutchinson, G. E. (1961) The paradox of the plankton. American Naturalist 95, 137-145.
  5. ^ McCauley, E.; Briand, F. (1979). "Zooplankton grazing and phytoplankton species richness: Field tests of the predation hypothesis". Limnology and Oceanography. 24 (2): 243–252. Bibcode:1979LimOc..24..243M. doi:10.4319/lo.1979.24.2.0243.
  6. ^ Károlyi, G., Péntek, Á., Scheuring, I., Tél, T., Toroczkai, Z. (2000) Chaotic flow: the physics of species coexistence. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97, 13661-13665.
  7. ^ Wiggert, J.D., Haskell, A.G.E., Paffenhofer, G.A., Hofmann, E.E. and Klinck, J.M. (2005) The role of feeding behavior in sustaining copepod populations in the tropical ocean Archived 2008-09-05 at the Wayback Machine. Journal of Plankton Research 27, 1013-1031.
  8. ^ Miyazaki, T., Tainaka, K., Togashi, T., Suzuki, T. and Yoshimura, J. (2006) Spatial coexistence of phytoplankton species in ecological timescale "Science Links Japan | Spatial coexistence of phytoplankton species in ecological timescale". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-06-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). Population Ecology 48(2), 107-112.
  9. ^ Newhook, R.; Briand, F. (1987). "Bacteria as structuring agents in lakes: Field manipulations with bacterioplankton". Archiv für Hydrobiologie. 109 (1): 121–138. doi:10.1127/archiv-hydrobiol/109/1987/121. hdl:10393/4660. ISSN 0003-9136.
  10. ^ Descamps-Julien, B.; Gonzalez, A. (2005). "Stable coexistence in a fluctuating environment: An experimental demonstration" (PDF). Ecology. 86 (10): 2815–2824. Bibcode:2005Ecol...86.2815D. doi:10.1890/04-1700. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 November 2006. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  11. ^ Scheffer, M., Rinaldi, S., Huisman, J. and Weissing, F.J. (2003) Why plankton communities have no equilibrium: solutions to the paradox. Hydrobiologia 491, 9-18.
  12. ^ Mitchell, J.G., Yamazaki, H., Seuront, L., Wolk, F., Li, H. (2008) Phytoplankton patch patterns: Seascape anatomy in a turbulent ocean. Journal of Marine Systems 69, 247-253.
  13. ^ Mayers, Kyle M.J. (30 January 2023). "Grazing on Marine Viruses and Its Biogeochemical Implications". mBio. 14 (1): e0192121. doi:10.1128/mbio.01921-21. hdl:11250/3078503. PMC 9973340. PMID 36715508.
  14. ^ Breitbart, Mya (2012). "Marine viruses: truth or dare". Annual Review of Marine Science. 4: 425–448. Bibcode:2012ARMS....4..425B. doi:10.1146/annurev-marine-120709-142805. ISSN 1941-1405. PMID 22457982.
  15. ^ Flynn, Kevin J.; Mitra, Aditee; Wilson, William H.; Kimmance, Susan A.; Clark, Darren R.; Pelusi, Angela; Polimene, Luca (May 2022). "'Boom-and-busted' dynamics of phytoplankton–virus interactions explain the paradox of the plankton". New Phytologist. 234 (3): 990–1002. doi:10.1111/nph.18042. ISSN 0028-646X. PMC 9313554. PMID 35179778.
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