Ice Stories: Dispatches from Polar Scientists - Reproduction in Antarctic Diatoms

Ice Stories: Dispatches from Polar Scientists
Reproduction in Antarctic Diatoms
By Maria Vernet


March 17th, 2009
ABOARD THE RVIB N. B. PALMER, ON THE SOUTHERN OCEAN– As most unicellular phytoplankton algae, diatoms usually reproduce by division. One cell becomes two after mitosis; the two new algae are called “daughter cells”. Once in a long while diatoms go through sexual reproduction. After meiosis the new daughter cells have a recombined genetic material. What brings this phenomenon? Some scientists think that the cell division (or asexual reproduction) produces silicon valves smaller and smaller until size can become a problem. Stress is another factor thought to affect reproductive strategy. Cells under unfavorable conditions for growth, when nutrients run out, undergo meiosis to increase their change of survival.

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