SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE VERTICAL MIGRATION OFDINOFLAGELLATES (1) (2)
- PMID: 27068208
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1529-8817.1968.tb04704.x
SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE VERTICAL MIGRATION OFDINOFLAGELLATES (1) (2)
Abstract
The technique of measuring chlorophyll concentration in vivo by fluorometric analysis has been adapted to studying the diurnal migration of dino-flagellates in the sea and also in a deep tank (3 m in diameter by 10 m deep). The downward migration of Ceratium furca was followed during a bloom off the California coast. The main band of cells migrated from the upper 2 m to a depth of 5 m about 2 hr after sunset, and was dispersed between 5 and 16 m 4.5 hr after sunset. Cultures of Gonyaulax polyedra and Cachonina niei both migrated to the surface of the deep lank during illumination and migrated downward during darkness at a rate of 1-2 mjhr. The downward migration was observed to begin before the light was turned off, indicating that migration is correlated with a cellular periodicity which is to some extent independent of the light regime. Further evidence for such a periodicity was afforded by observations that C. niei start to migrate up in the water column before start of the light period. Nitrogen-limited cells of G. polyedra showed no diurnal migration, but within 1 day after addition of a nitrogen source they recovered their full migratory ability. Cells of C. niei, however, continued to migrate during 5 days of N-starvation, although they did not concentrate in the upper 1/2 m as did the control cells.
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