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Dive into the research topics where Suzanne L. Strom is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzanne L. Strom.


Science | 2008

Microbial Ecology of Ocean Biogeochemistry: A Community Perspective

Suzanne L. Strom

The oceans harbor a tremendous diversity of marine microbes. Different functional groups of bacteria, archaea, and protists arise from this diversity to dominate various habitats and drive globally important biogeochemical cycles. Explanations for the distribution of microbial taxa and their associated activity often focus on resource availability and abiotic conditions. However, the continual reshaping of communities by mortality, allelopathy, symbiosis, and other processes shows that community interactions exert strong selective pressure on marine microbes. Deeper exploration of microbial interactions is now possible via molecular prospecting and taxon-specific experimental approaches. A holistic outlook that encompasses the full array of selective pressures on individuals will help elucidate the maintenance of microbial diversity and the regulation of biogeochemical reactions by planktonic communities.


Progress in Oceanography | 1993

Primary production in the subarctic Pacific Ocean: Project SUPER

Nicholas A. Welschmeyer; Suzanne L. Strom; Ralf Goericke; Giacomo R. DiTullio; Marcia P. Belvin; Willis Petersen

Abstract Primary production was measured on four cruises to the subarctic Pacific Ocean as an integral component of the SUPER Project (SUbarctic Pacific Ecosystem Research). Results from 26 in situ experiments and 9 simulated in situ experiments yielded production rates that were significantly higher than measured during the earlier Canadian Weather Station program. The new estimate of annual primary production is ca 170g C m−2y−1, over three times greater than previously thought. Maximum production rates of over 1g C m−2d−1 also exceeded recent measurements made with ultraclean sampling technique. Photosynthesis versus irradiance experiments yielded average light-saturated, chlorophyll-specific assimilation rates of ca. 60mgC mgChl−1d−1, which, when combined with local estimates of algal C/Chl, suggested that the specific growth rate of phytoplankton exceeded one doubling per day under optimum conditions of irradiance. Although no spring phytoplankton blooms have ever been observed in the offshore subarctic Pacific, the primary production rates in this region are among the highest reported in any open-ocean environment; production per unit biomass does not seem limited to any extent. Removal processes, such as grazing and sinking, must necessarily play a major role in controlling the standing crop of phytoplankton in the subarctic Pacific.


Journal of Phycology | 2002

DIMETHYLSULFONIOPROPIONATE CLEAVAGE BY MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON IN RESPONSE TO MECHANICAL, CHEMICAL, OR DARK STRESS1

Gordon Wolfe; Suzanne L. Strom; Jan L. Holmes; T. Radzio; M. Brady Olson

Several bloom‐forming marine algae produce concentrated intracellular dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) and display high DMSP cleavage activity in vitro and during lysis after grazing or viral attack. Here we show evidence for cleavage of DMSP in response to environmental cues among different strains of the haptophyte Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) Hay et Mohler and the dinoflagellate Alexandrium spp. (Halim). Sparging or shaking live cells of either taxon increased dimethyl sulfide (DMS), especially in dinoflagellates, known to be very sensitive to shear stresses. Additions of polyamines, known triggers of exocytosis in some protists, also stimulated DMSP cleavage in a dose‐responsive manner. We observed DMS production by some algae after shifts in light regime. When most exponential‐phase E. huxleyi were transferred to continuous darkness, cells decreased in volume and DMSP content within 24 h; DMSP content per unit cell volume remained relatively steady. DMS accumulated as long as cells remained in the dark, but on returning to a light:dark cycle DMS accumulation ceased within 24 h. However, E. huxleyi strain CCMP 373, containing highly active in vitro DMSP lyase, produced only transient accumulations of DMS in the dark. This was apparently due to production and concomitant oxidation or uptake of DMS, because cells of this strain rapidly removed DMS added to cultures. Three strains of the dinoflagellate Alexandrium tamarense containing high in vitro DMSP lyase activity showed no DMS production in the dark, and all appeared to remove additions of DMS. Alexandrium tamarense strain CCMP 1771 also removed dimethyl disulfide, an inhibitor of bacterial DMS consumption. These data suggest that physical or chemical cues can trigger algal DMSP cleavage, but DMS production may be masked by subsequent oxidation and/or uptake.


Deep-sea Research Part I-oceanographic Research Papers | 1993

Production of pheopigments by marine protozoa: results of laboratory experiments analysed by HPLC

Suzanne L. Strom

Abstract Pigment degradation by six species of herbivorous protozoa, fed a variety of phytoplankton foods, was studied in the laboratory. High-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) analysis showed that degradation products of chlorophylls a , b and c formed during every experiment; several carotenoid alteration products also were observed. Dominant chlorophyll a degradation products were a pheophytin a and two relatively non-polar pheophorbide a compounds. The latter may be useful markers for protozoan herbivory in the field. There were differences between the patterns of pheopigment production by ciliates and a heterotrophic dinoflagellate. Relative to macrozooplankton herbivores, chl a degradation by individual protozoa appeared to be less extensive (both the ratios of pheophytin a : pheophorbide a and pheopigment produced: chlorophyll ingested were high during the early part of time-series experiments). A grazing model demonstrates that loss of pheopigment and decrease in pigment conversion ratios during time-series experiments could have been due to reingestion of fecal material by protozoan grazers. Reingestion may lead to extensive degradation of pigments and a high particle recycling efficiency by microzooplankton communities in natural waters.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Major transitions in dinoflagellate evolution unveiled by phylotranscriptomics

Jan Janouškovec; Gregory S. Gavelis; Fabien Burki; Donna Dinh; Tsvetan R. Bachvaroff; Sebastian G. Gornik; Kelley J. Bright; Behzad Imanian; Suzanne L. Strom; Charles F. Delwiche; Ross F. Waller; Robert A. Fensome; Brian S. Leander; Forest Rohwer; Juan F. Saldarriaga

Significance We created a dataset of dinoflagellate transcriptomes to resolve internal phylogenetic relationships of the group. We show that the dinoflagellate theca originated once, through a process that likely involved changes in the metabolism of cellulose, and suggest that a late origin of dinosterol in the group is at odds with dinoflagellates being the source of this important biomarker before the Mesozoic. We also show that nonphotosynthetic dinoflagellates have retained nonphotosynthetic plastids with vital metabolic functions, and propose that one of these may be the evolutionary source of dinoflagellate bioluminescence. Finally, we reconstruct major molecular and morphological transitions in dinoflagellates and highlight the role of horizontal gene transfer in the origin of their unique nuclear architecture. Dinoflagellates are key species in marine environments, but they remain poorly understood in part because of their large, complex genomes, unique molecular biology, and unresolved in-group relationships. We created a taxonomically representative dataset of dinoflagellate transcriptomes and used this to infer a strongly supported phylogeny to map major morphological and molecular transitions in dinoflagellate evolution. Our results show an early-branching position of Noctiluca, monophyly of thecate (plate-bearing) dinoflagellates, and paraphyly of athecate ones. This represents unambiguous phylogenetic evidence for a single origin of the group’s cellulosic theca, which we show coincided with a radiation of cellulases implicated in cell division. By integrating dinoflagellate molecular, fossil, and biogeochemical evidence, we propose a revised model for the evolution of thecal tabulations and suggest that the late acquisition of dinosterol in the group is inconsistent with dinoflagellates being the source of this biomarker in pre-Mesozoic strata. Three distantly related, fundamentally nonphotosynthetic dinoflagellates, Noctiluca, Oxyrrhis, and Dinophysis, contain cryptic plastidial metabolisms and lack alternative cytosolic pathways, suggesting that all free-living dinoflagellates are metabolically dependent on plastids. This finding led us to propose general mechanisms of dependency on plastid organelles in eukaryotes that have lost photosynthesis; it also suggests that the evolutionary origin of bioluminescence in nonphotosynthetic dinoflagellates may be linked to plastidic tetrapyrrole biosynthesis. Finally, we use our phylogenetic framework to show that dinoflagellate nuclei have recruited DNA-binding proteins in three distinct evolutionary waves, which included two independent acquisitions of bacterial histone-like proteins.


Progress in Oceanography | 1993

Abundance, variability, and potential grazing impact of planktonic ciliates in the open subaratic Pacific Ocean

Suzanne L. Strom; James R. Postel; Beatrice C. Booth

Abstract The abundance and variability of planktonic ciliates in the open subarctic Pacific were determined during four month-long cruises in 1987 and 1988. The ciliate community, numerically dominated by relatively small aloricate choreotrichs, was comparable in abundance to communities in a range of oceanic and neritic environments, including waters with much higher average chlorophyll concentrations. Integrated (0–80m) ciliate biomass was typically 100–200mgC m −2 , although 3- to 4-fold higher levels were observed on two occasions in spring. Ciliate community biomass, in general, was dominated by large (>20 μ m width) individuals, although in August 1988 the biomass of smaller cells was as great or greater. The estimated grazing impact of the ciliate community averaged 20% of the primary production. On one instance in May 1988, however, a large biomass of ciliates led to an estimated grazing impact equivalent to 55% of phytoplankton production. While ciliates may be major phytoplankton grazers during sporadic ciliate “blooms”, dino- and other heterotrophic flagellates, which make up the bulk of microheterotroph biomass, must normally be of equal or greater importance as herbivores in this ocean region.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2014

Large-scale phylogenomic analysis reveals the phylogenetic position of the problematic taxon Protocruzia and unravels the deep phylogenetic affinities of the ciliate lineages

Eleni Gentekaki; Martin Kolisko; Vittorio Boscaro; Kelley J. Bright; Fernando Dini; G. Di Giuseppe; Yingchun Gong; Cristina Miceli; Letizia Modeo; Robert Molestina; Giulio Petroni; Sandra Pucciarelli; Andrew J. Roger; Suzanne L. Strom; Denis H. Lynn

The Ciliophora is one of the most studied protist lineages because of its important ecological role in the microbial loop. While there is an abundance of molecular data for many ciliate groups, it is commonly limited to the 18S ribosomal RNA locus. There is a paucity of data when it comes to availability of protein-coding genes especially for taxa that do not belong to the class Oligohymenophorea. To address this gap, we have sequenced EST libraries for 11 ciliate species. A supermatrix was constructed for phylogenomic analysis based on 158 genes and 42,158 characters and included 16 ciliates, four dinoflagellates and nine apicomplexans. This is the first multigene-based analysis focusing on the phylum Ciliophora. Our analyses reveal two robust superclades within the Intramacronucleata; one composed of the classes Spirotrichea, Armophorea and Litostomatea (SAL) and another with Colpodea and Oligohymenophorea. Furthermore, we provide corroborative evidence for removing the ambiguous taxon Protocruzia from the class Spirotrichea and placing it as incertae sedis in the phylum Ciliophora.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Variability in protist grazing and growth on different marine Synechococcus isolates.

Jude Apple; Suzanne L. Strom; Brian Palenik; Bianca Brahamsha

ABSTRACT Grazing mortality of the marine phytoplankton Synechococcus is dominated by planktonic protists, yet rates of consumption and factors regulating grazer-Synechococcus interactions are poorly understood. One aspect of predator-prey interactions for which little is known are the mechanisms by which Synechococcus avoids or resists predation and, in turn, how this relates to the ability of Synechococcus to support growth of protist grazer populations. Grazing experiments conducted with the raptorial dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marina and phylogenetically diverse Synechococcus isolates (strains WH8102, CC9605, CC9311, and CC9902) revealed marked differences in grazing rates—specifically that WH8102 was grazed at significantly lower rates than all other isolates. Additional experiments using the heterotrophic nanoflagellate Goniomonas pacifica and the filter-feeding tintinnid ciliate Eutintinnis sp. revealed that this pattern in grazing susceptibility among the isolates transcended feeding guilds and grazer taxon. Synechococcus cell size, elemental ratios, and motility were not able to explain differences in grazing rates, indicating that other features play a primary role in grazing resistance. Growth of heterotrophic protists was poorly coupled to prey ingestion and was influenced by the strain of Synechococcus being consumed. Although Synechococcus was generally a poor-quality food source, it tended to support higher growth and survival of G. pacifica and O. marina relative to Eutintinnis sp., indicating that suitability of Synechococcus varies among grazer taxa and may be a more suitable food source for the smaller protist grazers. This work has developed tractable model systems for further studies of grazer-Synechococcus interactions in marine microbial food webs.


Journal of Phycology | 2011

INTERSTRAIN VARIABILITY IN PHYSIOLOGY AND GENETICS OF HETEROSIGMA AKASHIWO (RAPHIDOPHYCEAE) FROM THE WEST COAST OF NORTH AMERICA1

Kerri A. Fredrickson; Suzanne L. Strom; Ryan Crim; Kathryn J. Coyne

High levels of intraspecific variability are often associated with HAB species, and this variability is likely an important factor in their competitive success. Heterosigma akashiwo (Hada) Hada ex Y. Hara et M. Chihara is an ichthyotoxic raphidophyte capable of forming dense surface‐water blooms in temperate coastal regions throughout the world. We isolated four strains of H. akashiwo from fish‐killing northern Puget Sound blooms in 2006 and 2007. By assessing numerous aspects of biochemistry, physiology, and toxicity, we were able to describe distinct ecotypes that may be related to isolation location, source population, or bloom timing. Contrasting elements among strains were cell size, maximum growth and photosynthesis rates, tolerance of low salinities, amino acid use, and toxicity to the ciliate grazer Strombidinopsis acuminatum (Fauré‐Fremiet). In addition, the rDNA sequences and chloroplast genome of each isolate were examined, and while all rDNA sequences were identical, the chloroplast genome identified differences among the strains that tracked differences in ecotype. H. akashiwo strain 07A, which was isolated from an unusual spring bloom, had a significantly higher maximum potential photosynthesis rate (28.7 pg C · cell−1 · h−1) and consistently exhibited the highest growth rates. Strains 06A and 06B were not genetically distinct from one another and were able to grow on the amino acids glutamine and alanine, while the other two strains could not. Strain 07B, which is genetically distinct from the other three strains, exhibited the only nontoxic effect. Thus, molecular tools may support identification, tracking, and prediction of strains and/or ecotypes using distinctive chloroplast gene signatures.


Journal of Phycology | 2013

Broad Salinity Tolerance as a Refuge from Predation in the Harmful Raphidophyte Alga Heterosigma akashiwo (Raphidophyceae)

Suzanne L. Strom; Elizabeth L. Harvey; Kerri A. Fredrickson; Susanne Menden-Deuer

The ability of harmful algal species to form dense, nearly monospecific blooms remains an ecological and evolutionary puzzle. We hypothesized that predation interacts with estuarine salinity gradients to promote blooms of Heterosigma akashiwo (Y. Hada) Y. Hada ex Y. Hara et M. Chihara, a cosmopolitan toxic raphidophyte. Specifically, H. akashiwos broad salinity tolerance appears to provide a refuge from predation that enhances the net growth of H. akashiwo populations through several mechanisms. (1) Contrasting salinity tolerance of predators and prey. Estuarine H. akashiwo isolates from the west coast of North America grew rapidly at salinities as low as six, and distributed throughout experimental salinity gradients to salinities as low as three. In contrast, survival of most protistan predator species was restricted to salinities >15. (2) H. akashiwo physiological and behavioral plasticity. Acclimation to low salinity enhanced H. akashiwos ability to accumulate and grow in low salinity waters. In addition, the presence of a ciliate predator altered H. akashiwo swimming behavior, promoting accumulation in low‐salinity surface layers inhospitable to the ciliate. (3) Negative effects of low salinity on predation processes. Ciliate predation rates decreased sharply at salinities <25 and, for one species, H. akashiwo toxicity increased at low salinities. Taken together, these behaviors and responses imply that blooms can readily initiate in low salinity waters where H. akashiwo would experience decreased predation pressure while maintaining near‐maximal growth rates. The salinity structure of a typical estuary would provide this HAB species a unique refuge from predation. Broad salinity tolerance in raphidophytes may have evolved in part as a response to selective pressures associated with predation.

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Kerri A. Fredrickson

Western Washington University

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Kelley J. Bright

Western Washington University

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Michael J. Dagg

Western Washington University

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M. Brady Olson

Western Washington University

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Erin L. Macri

Western Washington University

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Gordon Wolfe

Western Washington University

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Phyllis J. Stabeno

Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory

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Stephen Sulkin

Western Washington University

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Amelia Kolb

Western Washington University

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