Journal article
Algivore or phototroph? Plakobranchus ocellatus (Gastropoda) continuously acquires kleptoplasts and nutrition from multiple algal species in nature
T Maeda, E Hirose, Y Chikaraishi, M Kawato, K Takishita, T Yoshida, H Verbruggen, J Tanaka, S Shimamura, Y Takaki, M Tsuchiya, K Iwai, T Maruyama
Plos One | PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE | Published : 2012
Abstract
The sea slug Plakobranchus ocellatus (Sacoglossa, Gastropoda) retains photosynthetically active chloroplasts from ingested algae (functional kleptoplasts) in the epithelial cells of its digestive gland for up to 10 months. While its feeding behavior has not been observed in natural habitats, two hypotheses have been proposed: 1) adult P. ocellatus uses kleptoplasts to obtain photosynthates and nutritionally behaves as a photoautotroph without replenishing the kleptoplasts; or 2) it behaves as a mixotroph (photoautotroph and herbivorous consumer) and replenishes kleptoplasts continually or periodically. To address the question of which hypothesis is more likely, we examined the source algae f..
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Awarded by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Funding Acknowledgements
The present research was supported by a grant from the Mikimoto Fund for Marine Ecology, a Grant-in-Aid for a Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Fellow (No. 20234567 to T. Maeda), a grant from the Research Foundation Flanders, a grant from the Australian Research Council (FT110100585 to H. Verbruggen), and a grant from the Okinawa Intellectual Cluster Program (to T. Maruyama). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.