Oceans cover two thirds of the surface of the earth, and host half of earth’s primary production via photosynthesis. Within the ocean, the largest single group of organisms by biomass are the protists, while simultaneously being the least understood. Protists are unicellular and colonial eukaryotes that are not animals, plants or fungi. Because of their primary abundance, it is necessary to characterize protist biology and ecology in order to understand the oceanic food web and how energy from primary production is transferred to higher trophic levels, both on current time scales (as a food source for ecologically and economically important animals such as fish and whales) and on geological time scales (through the formation of crude oil deposits and calcareous rock such as limestone).
Global DNA sequencing surveys of protists in the sunlit ocean have revealed that only 500 species comprise roughly 75% of total protist abundance, yet the vast majority of these species are unknown to science (and are currently only identified by their unique DNA barcodes). This project seeks to isolate, culture in the lab, and characterize the biology of these globally abundant, unknown protists as a key to understand global ocean ecology.