Cool and Shady: Ecophysiological Preferences of Chrysophytes
Christina Bock, Guido Sieber, Sara Beszteri, Frida Klein, Hannah‐Marie Stappert, Célina Wessel, Simone Engelskirchen, Jens Boenigk

TL;DR
This study explores how different chrysophyte species respond to changes in temperature and light in alpine lakes.
Contribution
The study reveals consistent growth optima for chrysophytes across diverse alpine and pre-alpine habitats.
Findings
Most chrysophyte strains showed peak growth between 15°C and 19°C.
Growth rates increased with light up to a species-specific optimum before plateauing or declining.
All strains required light for growth, showing negative responses in darkness.
Abstract
Chrysophyceae (Stramenopiles) are a diverse group of protists widely distributed in various aquatic habitats, including alpine lakes, where they play key ecological roles. Their nutritional modes—phototrophy, heterotrophy, and mixotrophy—enable them to adapt to the unique light and temperature conditions found across altitudinal gradients in mountain environments. This study investigates the growth responses of three mixotrophic and three phototrophic chrysophyte strains, isolated from alpine and pre‐alpine lakes, to varying light intensities and temperatures. Our results show that both temperature and light intensity exert strong, species‐specific effects on the growth of phototrophic and mixotrophic Chrysophyceae. Despite their contrasting original habitats, most strains shared similar growth optima, with peak performance generally observed between 15°C and 19°C and reduced growth at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProtist diversity and phylogeny · Biocrusts and Microbial Ecology · Microbial Community Ecology and Physiology
