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Protist, Vol. 149, 29-37, February 1998 © Gustav Fischer Verlag
ORIGINAL PAPER
Protist
Protozoan Diversity: Converging Estimates
of the Global Number of Free-Living Ciliate Species
Bland J. Finlaya,1, Genoveva F. Estebana, and Tom Fenchelb
a Institute of Freshwater Ecology, Windermere laboratory, The Ferry House, Ambleside, Cumbria LA22 alP, UK
b Marine Biological laboratory (University of Copenhagen), Strandpromenaden 5, DK - 3000, Helsingm, Denmark
Submitted October 6, 1997; Accepted November 14, 1997
Monitoring Editor: Michael Melkonian
Protozoa are the most abundant phagotrophs in the biosphere, but no scientific strategy has
emerged that might allow accurate definition of the dimensions of protozoan diversity on a global
scale. We have begun this task by searching for the common ground between taxonomy and ecology.
We have used two methods - taxonomic analysis, and extrapolation from ecological datasets - to es-
timate the global species richness of free-living ciliated protozoa in the marine interstitial and fresh-
water benthos. The methods provide estimates that agree within a factor of two, and it is apparent
that the species-area curves for ciliates must be almost flat (the slope z takes the very low value of
0.043 in the equation: [number of species] = [constant][area]Z). Insofar as independent ecological
datasets can be extrapolated to show similiar, flat, species-area relations, and that these converge
with an independent estimate from taxonomic analysis, we conclude that the great majority of free-
living ciliates are ubiquitous. This strengthens our recent claim that the global species richness of
free-living ciliated protozoa is relatively low (-3000).
Introduction
It is rather difficult to provide accurate estimates for
the number of species in any of the larger taxonomic
groups (see May 1988, 1990). Furthermore, the
scale of the problem seems to be inversely related
to the size of the organisms concerned. Estimating
the global species richness of birds is probably an
achievable task (Zink 1996), but more difficult for the
insects (Gaston 1992) and, apparently, extraordinar-
ily difficult for micro-organisms (see UNEP 1995),
where in many cases we do not even have a clear
idea of what a species is, let alone a sound strategy
for estimating global diversity.
1 Corresponding author;
fax 44-15394-46914;
e-mail b.finlay@ife.ac.uk
Some of the methods used for estimating
species richness of larger organisms are inade-
quate when it comes to micro-organisms. For ex-
ample, it may under certain circumstances be pos-
sible to extrapolate species numbers in size cate-
gories down to about 1 em, but this becomes a very
dubious procedure for size classes smaller than this
(Fenchel 1993). The main reason may be the
marked tendency towards cosmopolitanism in the
smallest organisms. For these, barriers to migration
and dispersal appear to be ineffective: thus rates of
extinction and speciation may be low, and the same
species will tend to be distributed worldwide. So
the global species richness of micro-organisms
could be relatively low, and the task of accurately
estimating the number of microbial species (includ-
Protist, Vol. 149, 29-37, February 1998 © Gustav Fischer Verlag
ORIGINAL PAPER
Protist
Protozoan Diversity: Converging Estimates
of the Global Number of Free-Living Ciliate Species
Bland J. Finlaya,1, Genoveva F. Estebana, and Tom Fenchelb
a Institute of Freshwater Ecology, Windermere laboratory, The Ferry House, Ambleside, Cumbria LA22 alP, UK
b Marine Biological laboratory (University of Copenhagen), Strandpromenaden 5, DK - 3000, Helsingm, Denmark
Submitted October 6, 1997; Accepted November 14, 1997
Monitoring Editor: Michael Melkonian
Protozoa are the most abundant phagotrophs in the biosphere, but no scientific strategy has
emerged that might allow accurate definition of the dimensions of protozoan diversity on a global
scale. We have begun this task by searching for the common ground between taxonomy and ecology.
We have used two methods - taxonomic analysis, and extrapolation from ecological datasets - to es-
timate the global species richness of free-living ciliated protozoa in the marine interstitial and fresh-
water benthos. The methods provide estimates that agree within a factor of two, and it is apparent
that the species-area curves for ciliates must be almost flat (the slope z takes the very low value of
0.043 in the equation: [number of species] = [constant][area]Z). Insofar as independent ecological
datasets can be extrapolated to show similiar, flat, species-area relations, and that these converge
with an independent estimate from taxonomic analysis, we conclude that the great majority of free-
living ciliates are ubiquitous. This strengthens our recent claim that the global species richness of
free-living ciliated protozoa is relatively low (-3000).
Introduction
It is rather difficult to provide accurate estimates for
the number of species in any of the larger taxonomic
groups (see May 1988, 1990). Furthermore, the
scale of the problem seems to be inversely related
to the size of the organisms concerned. Estimating
the global species richness of birds is probably an
achievable task (Zink 1996), but more difficult for the
insects (Gaston 1992) and, apparently, extraordinar-
ily difficult for micro-organisms (see UNEP 1995),
where in many cases we do not even have a clear
idea of what a species is, let alone a sound strategy
for estimating global diversity.
1 Corresponding author;
fax 44-15394-46914;
e-mail b.finlay@ife.ac.uk
Some of the methods used for estimating
species richness of larger organisms are inade-
quate when it comes to micro-organisms. For ex-
ample, it may under certain circumstances be pos-
sible to extrapolate species numbers in size cate-
gories down to about 1 em, but this becomes a very
dubious procedure for size classes smaller than this
(Fenchel 1993). The main reason may be the
marked tendency towards cosmopolitanism in the
smallest organisms. For these, barriers to migration
and dispersal appear to be ineffective: thus rates of
extinction and speciation may be low, and the same
species will tend to be distributed worldwide. So
the global species richness of micro-organisms
could be relatively low, and the task of accurately
estimating the number of microbial species (includ-
30 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel
ing protozoa) may be simpler than previously
thought.
What evidence is there that protozoan species are
typically cosmopolitan and that the global number
of these species is modest? We have begun to an-
swer this question for one large protozoan group in
particular - the ciliates. There are four main bodies
of evidence. First, and in common with most other
groups of protists, there is no good evidence that
ciliates have a biogeography (Bary 1950; Bowers
and Pratt 1995; Corliss 1974; Ekebom et al. 1996;
Kristiansen 1996; Lackey 1938; Larsen and Patter-
son 1990; Ogden and Hedley 1980; Patterson and
Simpson 1996; Sandon 1927; Stout 1956; Tyler
1996). On the contrary, it seems that the same ciliate
species are found wherever their preferred habitat is
found (e.g. Smith 1978). Second, enrichment culture
experiments indicate that local species richness of
ciliates is a significant proportion of the global
species richness (Fenchel et al. 1997; Finlay et al.
1996a). Third, the diversity of free-living ciliate
species described in the international literature is a
relatively small number (close to 3000, after revi-
sion), and unlikely to increase significantly in the fu-
ture (Finlay et al. 1996b). Fourth, ciliates and other
protists have high absolute abundance and, in many
cases, effective passive dispersal (e.g. Maguire
1963; Parsons et al. 1966; Maguire and Belk 1967;
Schlichting and Sides 1969; Kristiansen 1996; Finlay
1997). Much evidence indicates that they are contin-
ually being distributed everywhere', and newly-
formed habitats such as freshwater ponds and vol-
canic islands are rapidly colonised (e.g. Holmberg
and Pejler 1972; Scourfield 1944). Free-living ciliates
may, in fact, be ubiquitous.
If we take this assumption of ubiquity and use it to
extrapolate from ecological datasets for relatively
small areas to produce global estimates of the num-
ber of ciliate species, will we obtain estimates that
are similar to the global number of nominal ciliate
species? We have tested this proposition, using
large datasets for free-living ciliates in the marine in-
terstitial and in the freshwater benthos. The cate-
gory 'free-living ciliates' is here defined as all those
extant ciliates that do not live exclusively as gut
symbionts (e.g. rumen ciliates), or as parasites or
symphorionts of specific metazoans. A detailed list
of taxa considered not to be free-living is given in
Finlay et al. (1996b).
Results
The ecological data for numbers and abundance of
ciliate species in marine and freshwater sites are
summarised in Table 1. As we also have data for the
numbers of individuals of each species, the species
abundance data can be illustrated as frequency
curves. Using the original method of Preston (1948),
with log2 octaves on the abscissa (Le. each succes-
sive octave represents a doubling in abundance), we
create species curves indicating that most species
are of intermediate abundance, a few species are
very abundant, and some are very rare. A normal
curve superimposed upon the logarithmic abun-
dance data (a 'lognormal' distribution) provides an
adequate fit (Figs. 1a, b). In this case, as is often so
with ecological data, the distribution is truncated, al-
though nearly 'unveiled' (Le. indicating that most
species have been recorded). But this message is
misleading, for it fails to take account of the poten-
tial ciliate diversity - the true number of ciliate
species present, but not detected during the times-
pan of the sampling programme. Many of the cryptic
Table 1. Summary information from ecological datasets with independent estimates for the global number of
ciliate species in the marine interstitial and in the freshwater benthos
Ecological Datasets Global Estimate Based on:
Number of Number of Extrapolation Taxonomic
ciliates ciliate species from ecological analysis*
recorded recorded datasets
Marine Helsing0r Beach 48186 85 597 793
Interstitial All marine sites 79342 151
Freshwater Esthwaite Water 20486 104 732 1370
Benthos All freshwater sites 35837 125
*Current estimated numbers for all nominal marine and non-marine free-living ciliate species are 1592 and 2152 re-
spectively. These numbers include, for example, planktonic species, many suctorians, and those ciliates found so
far only in soil.
30 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel
ing protozoa) may be simpler than previously
thought.
What evidence is there that protozoan species are
typically cosmopolitan and that the global number
of these species is modest? We have begun to an-
swer this question for one large protozoan group in
particular - the ciliates. There are four main bodies
of evidence. First, and in common with most other
groups of protists, there is no good evidence that
ciliates have a biogeography (Bary 1950; Bowers
and Pratt 1995; Corliss 1974; Ekebom et al. 1996;
Kristiansen 1996; Lackey 1938; Larsen and Patter-
son 1990; Ogden and Hedley 1980; Patterson and
Simpson 1996; Sandon 1927; Stout 1956; Tyler
1996). On the contrary, it seems that the same ciliate
species are found wherever their preferred habitat is
found (e.g. Smith 1978). Second, enrichment culture
experiments indicate that local species richness of
ciliates is a significant proportion of the global
species richness (Fenchel et al. 1997; Finlay et al.
1996a). Third, the diversity of free-living ciliate
species described in the international literature is a
relatively small number (close to 3000, after revi-
sion), and unlikely to increase significantly in the fu-
ture (Finlay et al. 1996b). Fourth, ciliates and other
protists have high absolute abundance and, in many
cases, effective passive dispersal (e.g. Maguire
1963; Parsons et al. 1966; Maguire and Belk 1967;
Schlichting and Sides 1969; Kristiansen 1996; Finlay
1997). Much evidence indicates that they are contin-
ually being distributed everywhere', and newly-
formed habitats such as freshwater ponds and vol-
canic islands are rapidly colonised (e.g. Holmberg
and Pejler 1972; Scourfield 1944). Free-living ciliates
may, in fact, be ubiquitous.
If we take this assumption of ubiquity and use it to
extrapolate from ecological datasets for relatively
small areas to produce global estimates of the num-
ber of ciliate species, will we obtain estimates that
are similar to the global number of nominal ciliate
species? We have tested this proposition, using
large datasets for free-living ciliates in the marine in-
terstitial and in the freshwater benthos. The cate-
gory 'free-living ciliates' is here defined as all those
extant ciliates that do not live exclusively as gut
symbionts (e.g. rumen ciliates), or as parasites or
symphorionts of specific metazoans. A detailed list
of taxa considered not to be free-living is given in
Finlay et al. (1996b).
Results
The ecological data for numbers and abundance of
ciliate species in marine and freshwater sites are
summarised in Table 1. As we also have data for the
numbers of individuals of each species, the species
abundance data can be illustrated as frequency
curves. Using the original method of Preston (1948),
with log2 octaves on the abscissa (Le. each succes-
sive octave represents a doubling in abundance), we
create species curves indicating that most species
are of intermediate abundance, a few species are
very abundant, and some are very rare. A normal
curve superimposed upon the logarithmic abun-
dance data (a 'lognormal' distribution) provides an
adequate fit (Figs. 1a, b). In this case, as is often so
with ecological data, the distribution is truncated, al-
though nearly 'unveiled' (Le. indicating that most
species have been recorded). But this message is
misleading, for it fails to take account of the poten-
tial ciliate diversity - the true number of ciliate
species present, but not detected during the times-
pan of the sampling programme. Many of the cryptic
Table 1. Summary information from ecological datasets with independent estimates for the global number of
ciliate species in the marine interstitial and in the freshwater benthos
Ecological Datasets Global Estimate Based on:
Number of Number of Extrapolation Taxonomic
ciliates ciliate species from ecological analysis*
recorded recorded datasets
Marine Helsing0r Beach 48186 85 597 793
Interstitial All marine sites 79342 151
Freshwater Esthwaite Water 20486 104 732 1370
Benthos All freshwater sites 35837 125
*Current estimated numbers for all nominal marine and non-marine free-living ciliate species are 1592 and 2152 re-
spectively. These numbers include, for example, planktonic species, many suctorians, and those ciliates found so
far only in soil.
25
20
a 25
20
Protozoan Diversity 31
b
~
:l 15
U
o
~
~
Co
III
~
'2 10
Co
V)
~
>
~ 15
o
~
~
Co
III
~
'2 10
Co
V)
5
1 2 I. 16 256 4096
1 2 I. 16 256 4096
Individuals per species
Individuals per species
Figures 1a, b. Lognormal distributions fitted to the ciliate species abundance data (log2) obtained from the marine
interstitial (a) and the freshwater benthos (b). Following Preston's (1948) terminology, the constant a (related to the
logarithmic standard deviation by the equation a =(1/[202])1/2) in the fitted curves takes the value 0.22 (marine) and
0.24 (freshwater). As drawn here, the y-axis is the "veil line", to the left of which lie those hypothetically rare ciliate
species that were not observed in the sampling programme (Le. abundance <1). The bar value shown for these is
an estimate, being equivalent to half of the number of species each represented by a single individual.
(e.g. encysted) and rare species present would have
required specific conditions in order to grow, repro-
duce and become detectable. Over the extended
periods of the sampling programmes, some of these
would have become detectable but it is likely that
many of the species that were present would not
have been recorded. Some would never have been
numerous, and others would have remained rare be-
cause they were migrants from the surrounding area
and beyond who had been transported to a place
where they awaited the arrival of conditions suitable
for population growth. One way to find the rare
species would be to look at a larger area, for that will
probably support additional ciliate niches; so some
species that remained undetected in the original,
small area may find the conditions they require for
population growth (and detection) in the larger area.
If the ecological datasets are plotted as ranked
species abundances (logarithmic), we find that the
curves become linear (Figs. 2a,b): that is to say, the
abundances of the successively rarer species de-
crease logarithmically. Furthermore, the slopes of
these trends seem insensitive to the size of the
datasets. In Figure 2a for example, the slope for the
Helsing0r Beach data is roughly the same as that for
the larger dataset that includes all the marine inter-
stitial sites. The same message is obvious in the
freshwater data. This feature is consistent with the
idea of the ubiquity of species: if the larger datasets
had included a number of species with exclusively
local distributions, their respective slopes would be
less steep than those for the smaller datasets from
smaller areas.
Now, if our datasets had been much larger, as if
we had examined much larger areas of sediment,
additional ciliate niches would have been included.
We would also have found a proportionate increase
in numbers of the more common species originally
recorded. It is reasonable therefore to extend each
terminal linear trend below an abundance of one cil-
iate (Figs. 2a, b) to indicate the additional species
that would be recovered by examining a larger area.
Take the example of the marine data (Fig. 2a). The
total number of ciliates found was 79342, and these
25
20
a 25
20
Protozoan Diversity 31
b
~
:l 15
U
o
~
~
Co
III
~
'2 10
Co
V)
~
>
~ 15
o
~
~
Co
III
~
'2 10
Co
V)
5
1 2 I. 16 256 4096
1 2 I. 16 256 4096
Individuals per species
Individuals per species
Figures 1a, b. Lognormal distributions fitted to the ciliate species abundance data (log2) obtained from the marine
interstitial (a) and the freshwater benthos (b). Following Preston's (1948) terminology, the constant a (related to the
logarithmic standard deviation by the equation a =(1/[202])1/2) in the fitted curves takes the value 0.22 (marine) and
0.24 (freshwater). As drawn here, the y-axis is the "veil line", to the left of which lie those hypothetically rare ciliate
species that were not observed in the sampling programme (Le. abundance <1). The bar value shown for these is
an estimate, being equivalent to half of the number of species each represented by a single individual.
(e.g. encysted) and rare species present would have
required specific conditions in order to grow, repro-
duce and become detectable. Over the extended
periods of the sampling programmes, some of these
would have become detectable but it is likely that
many of the species that were present would not
have been recorded. Some would never have been
numerous, and others would have remained rare be-
cause they were migrants from the surrounding area
and beyond who had been transported to a place
where they awaited the arrival of conditions suitable
for population growth. One way to find the rare
species would be to look at a larger area, for that will
probably support additional ciliate niches; so some
species that remained undetected in the original,
small area may find the conditions they require for
population growth (and detection) in the larger area.
If the ecological datasets are plotted as ranked
species abundances (logarithmic), we find that the
curves become linear (Figs. 2a,b): that is to say, the
abundances of the successively rarer species de-
crease logarithmically. Furthermore, the slopes of
these trends seem insensitive to the size of the
datasets. In Figure 2a for example, the slope for the
Helsing0r Beach data is roughly the same as that for
the larger dataset that includes all the marine inter-
stitial sites. The same message is obvious in the
freshwater data. This feature is consistent with the
idea of the ubiquity of species: if the larger datasets
had included a number of species with exclusively
local distributions, their respective slopes would be
less steep than those for the smaller datasets from
smaller areas.
Now, if our datasets had been much larger, as if
we had examined much larger areas of sediment,
additional ciliate niches would have been included.
We would also have found a proportionate increase
in numbers of the more common species originally
recorded. It is reasonable therefore to extend each
terminal linear trend below an abundance of one cil-
iate (Figs. 2a, b) to indicate the additional species
that would be recovered by examining a larger area.
Take the example of the marine data (Fig. 2a). The
total number of ciliates found was 79342, and these
No. of ciliates No. of ciliates c.v
N
10000
100000 I I
~
~•
~
c....
'TI
S'
~
P
:n
m
!eo
CD
0-
$I)
.~
$I)
~
Co
:-f
'TI
CD
~
o
:::r
~•
~~,
100+ ~
() ,
~
10
C>
~~
 ~
-1 I
  ~~
-0 50 100  150 200 250 300
 
 

 Species sequence
~•o
o
1000 to. .
•
10000 t
100000 I I
300
Species sequence
200 250150




 100





50
10
•
~
•
~,
,

~.... . .100 V······· ~
%
'%o
 't.J '-
~~. I
~  ~~~~;:-------;-1 I
o
1000
a b
Figures 2a, b. Rank-abundance plots of the ecological data from the marine interstitial (a) and the freshwater benthos (b). The terminal components in
each are assumed to be linear. a: open symbols represent ciliates in Helsing0r Beach; filled symbols, all marine sites (see Table 1). b: open symbols
represent ciliates in Esthwaite Water; filled, all freshwater sites (see Table 2). See text for method of extrapolation. The number of ciliate species esti-
mated for 1m2 of the marine interstitial is 212 (a), and 234 for 1 m2
of freshwater benthos (b).
No. of ciliates No. of ciliates
100000 . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , 1 0 0 0 0 0 . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
10000
p
•
~
300250
Species sequence
200150



~;,
~~
"
~ ~
 
 -.1 +---+-~...--.___+_....-.-+-__~_ _-+-..........__..........._~,.>..1·..........._~---+---I
o 50 100



10
100
I-
~•o
o
1000 0 .
•
•
10000
300
Species sequence
•
~
•
0'
~
" '&l .-
b '-
~ ~
 -1 -I-_--+-~.......... .,......... ........___.........._..,,1 +_ ....j
o 50  100 150 200 250
 
 
 
 
10
100
1000
a b
Figures 2a, b. Rank-abundance plots of the ecological data from the marine interstitial (a) and the freshwater benthos (b). The terminal components in
each are assumed to be linear. a: open symbols represent ciliates in HelsingeJr Beach; filled symbols, all marine sites (see Table 1). b: open symbols
represent ciliates in Esthwaite Water; filled, all freshwater sites (see Table 2). See text for method of extrapolation. The number of ciliate species esti-
mated for 1m2 of the marine interstitial is 212 (a), and 234 for 1 m2
of freshwater benthos (b).
Protozoan Diversity 33
6
Insects
10
Ciliates
5o
Log Area (km
2
)
-5
2
5
4
O+------f-------+------+---------l
-10
3
III
III
Q)
c:
.c:(.)
~
In
Q)
'0
Q)
a.
(J)
Cl
o
...J
Figure 3. Species-area relation-
ships for freshwater benthic and
marine interstitial ciliates obtained
by extrapolation from the ecologi-
cal datasets (upper curve "all
freshwater sites"; lower curve "all
marine sites"), plotted with global
species richness estimated inde-
pendently from taxonomic analysis
(1'" freshwater benthos; A, marine
interstitial). The origins of the ex-
trapolations are the ecological
data given in Table 1, and the
curves are polynomials (marine in-
terstitial: y =-0.0031x2
+ 0.0383x +
2.587; freshwater benthos: y = -
0.0021x2
+ 0.0433x + 2.669). The
linear least squares regression
computed through the combined
ciliate extrapolations is: y =0.043x
+ 2.571 ; r2 =0.96 (Le. z =0.043). In
marked contrast, the regression
drawn for the insects (using data
for various regions of the world,
assimilated by Gaston [1992]), has
az value of 0.31.
belonged to 151 species. This is the total ciliate
complement of 87cm2
of sediment, and in this area,
the rarest ciliate species was represented by a sin-
gle individual. Now, suppose that we could record
every ciliate in the 1 m2 surrounding (and including)
our original 87 cm2
and that our rare ciliate retained
the same degree of rarity within this enlarged area.
This rare species would now be represented by an
estimated 115 individuals, as illustrated in Figure 2a
by moving vertically upwards to this value. All other
ciliate species will keep the same relative abun-
dances they had in the smaller area, so the linear
slope of the new, upwards displaced, rank-abun-
dance plot will be the same as the original (broken
line terminating with an arrow, in Figs 2a, b). This
new theoretical plot (for 1 m2) indicates that the cili-
ate with an abundance of 115 individuals per 1 m2
will, when the additional species are added to the
rank abundance plot, terminate the species se-
quence at 212 species (Le. there are estimated to be
212 species in 1 m2
, when the rarest species in that
area is represented by a single individual). The same
procedure can be used to extrapolate to areas on a
'global' scale (e.g. 2x106
km2
- the area of inland
fresh waters in the world) in Figure 3, at which point
the projected total is 597 species. When the same
procedure is carried out for the freshwater benthic
ciliates, the projected total is 732 species (Table 1).
Discussion
We find that the global extrapolations are within a
factor of two of the numbers of species derived from
an analysis of species descriptions in the interna-
tional published literature (Table 1). Furthermore,
there is good reason for believing that the corre-
spondence between the two types of estimate may
be even better than this, because the number of
species estimated from taxonomic analysis is prob-
ably still too high. There is no doubt that many syn-
onyms remain embedded in the published literature,
especially in the many crowded genera that require
taxonomic revision (see Finlay et al. 1996b). One
problem that may be unique to the ciliates (and pos-
sibly other protists) is the practice of creating new
genera to accommodate the overflow from crowded
genera. This has produced a very large number of
single-species genera (372 out of a total of 774 cili-
ate genera; Finlay et al. 1996b), making it even more
Protozoan Diversity 33
6
Insects
10
Ciliates
5o
Log Area (km
2
)
-5
2
5
4
O+------f-------+------+---------l
-10
3
III
III
Q)
c:
.c:(.)
~
In
Q)
'0
Q)
a.
(J)
Cl
o
...J
Figure 3. Species-area relation-
ships for freshwater benthic and
marine interstitial ciliates obtained
by extrapolation from the ecologi-
cal datasets (upper curve "all
freshwater sites"; lower curve "all
marine sites"), plotted with global
species richness estimated inde-
pendently from taxonomic analysis
(1'" freshwater benthos; A, marine
interstitial). The origins of the ex-
trapolations are the ecological
data given in Table 1, and the
curves are polynomials (marine in-
terstitial: y =-0.0031x2
+ 0.0383x +
2.587; freshwater benthos: y = -
0.0021x2
+ 0.0433x + 2.669). The
linear least squares regression
computed through the combined
ciliate extrapolations is: y =0.043x
+ 2.571 ; r2 =0.96 (Le. z =0.043). In
marked contrast, the regression
drawn for the insects (using data
for various regions of the world,
assimilated by Gaston [1992]), has
az value of 0.31.
belonged to 151 species. This is the total ciliate
complement of 87cm2
of sediment, and in this area,
the rarest ciliate species was represented by a sin-
gle individual. Now, suppose that we could record
every ciliate in the 1 m2 surrounding (and including)
our original 87 cm2
and that our rare ciliate retained
the same degree of rarity within this enlarged area.
This rare species would now be represented by an
estimated 115 individuals, as illustrated in Figure 2a
by moving vertically upwards to this value. All other
ciliate species will keep the same relative abun-
dances they had in the smaller area, so the linear
slope of the new, upwards displaced, rank-abun-
dance plot will be the same as the original (broken
line terminating with an arrow, in Figs 2a, b). This
new theoretical plot (for 1 m2) indicates that the cili-
ate with an abundance of 115 individuals per 1 m2
will, when the additional species are added to the
rank abundance plot, terminate the species se-
quence at 212 species (Le. there are estimated to be
212 species in 1 m2
, when the rarest species in that
area is represented by a single individual). The same
procedure can be used to extrapolate to areas on a
'global' scale (e.g. 2x106
km2
- the area of inland
fresh waters in the world) in Figure 3, at which point
the projected total is 597 species. When the same
procedure is carried out for the freshwater benthic
ciliates, the projected total is 732 species (Table 1).
Discussion
We find that the global extrapolations are within a
factor of two of the numbers of species derived from
an analysis of species descriptions in the interna-
tional published literature (Table 1). Furthermore,
there is good reason for believing that the corre-
spondence between the two types of estimate may
be even better than this, because the number of
species estimated from taxonomic analysis is prob-
ably still too high. There is no doubt that many syn-
onyms remain embedded in the published literature,
especially in the many crowded genera that require
taxonomic revision (see Finlay et al. 1996b). One
problem that may be unique to the ciliates (and pos-
sibly other protists) is the practice of creating new
genera to accommodate the overflow from crowded
genera. This has produced a very large number of
single-species genera (372 out of a total of 774 cili-
ate genera; Finlay et al. 1996b), making it even more
34 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel
laborious to discover synonyms. Another problem
that is certainly not unique to ciliates is that too
many 'new' species are still being described on the
basis of trivial differences, or in ignorance of species
descriptions that have already been published. One
likely consequence of the resolution of these prob-
lems is that our estimates of global species richness
may, in the course of time, show even better conver-
gence than they do at present. In addition, we may
also have some tentative evidence that the extrapo-
lations provide realistic estimates on a local scale.
We are engaged in an intensive long-term study of
the ciliate fauna in a natural, freshwater pond in Eng-
land (e.g. Finlay et al. 1988; 1996a,c). The number of
ciliate species that are predicted to find suitable
habitats in one hectare (the area of the pond) is 375
(from the polynomial in Fig. 3). Our list for the pond
currently contains 244 ciliate species (only one of
which may be new to science); and although the
number continues to grow with continued sampling
effort, it is becoming noticeably more difficult to
record additional species for this water body.
We have assumed throughout that ciliates are
ubiquitous. Absolute abundance is so large, and
passive dispersal so effective, that every species
has some probability of being transported, at some
point in time, anywhere in the biosphere. Each
species will grow and reproduce where it finds a
suitable habitat, and if the habitats are found in
many different parts of the world, that species will
be considered to have a cosmopolitan distribution.
But perhaps we are mistaken - perhaps we are un-
able to detect subtle but important differences sep-
arating ciliates, so we identify ciliates from different
places as the same species only because we are un-
able to tell them apart. These separate species
could have different spatial distributions, and in an
extreme case, a ciliate referred to as a cosmopolitan
morphospecies could consist of many similar
species, each with its own geographical distribution.
There is, however, one good piece of evidence indi-
cating that this is not usually the case. In some cili-
ate genera (e.g. Paramecium and Tetrahymena), a
biological species concept does apply. The different
syngens are in most cases morphologically indistin-
guishable, and yet they are readily identifiable using
laboratory tests of their mutual reproductive isola-
tion. We would expect this reproductive isolation to
be correlated with geographic isolation, but the evi-
dence is to the contrary. Most syngens in the Para-
mecium aurelia complex have cosmopolitan distri-
butions (Nyberg 1988), many in the Tetrahymena
pyriformis complex have been found on two or more
continents (Nanney and McCoy 1976), and the ap-
parent absence of species from other regions in the
world might easily be contradicted with additional
sampling effort (Corliss and Daggett 1983). It ap-
pears as if those ciliates holding the most promise of
revealing a species biogeography within a common
morphotype, fail to do just that.
A second argument against cosmopolitanism in
ciliates is fuelled by the so-called endemics. New
species do continue to be discovered. Invariably
these come from unusual or previously unexplored
habitats, such as solution lakes (Esteban et al.
1993), wetlands in tropical Africa (Dragesco and
Dragesco-Kerneis 1986 ) or Antarctic sea-ice (Petz
et al. 1995). The relevant point is that these species
are found in these places because of the habitats
that the places provide. This is graphically illustrated
by the species of sea-ice ciliates that appear to be
identical in the Arctic and in the Antarctic (Agatha et
al. 1993; Petz et al. 1995). There is also an undeni-
able tendency for 'endemics' to acquire a broader
geographical distribution in response to additional
sampling effort, and the true number is probably low
(Fenchel 1993; Foissner 1997). Wilbert and Kahan
(1981) described a very large and unusual ciliate
(Condylostoma reichi) from Solar Lake in Eilat. It was
subsequently found in tropical Africa (Dragesco and
Dragesco-Kerneis 1986), and a ciliate most closely
resembling C. reichi has recently been found in the
Antarctic (Petz et al. 1995). An 'endemic' of the
Hawaiian archipelago (Foissner 1994) was recently
found in wet moss by a river in central Spain (Olmo
and Tellez 1996).
The assumption of cosmopolitanism in free-living
ciliates is, in general, justified, and it may even be
true for the ciliates living in habitats that are rela-
tively rare. These ciliates will have lower absolute
global abundances and (for purely statistical rea-
sons) rates of dispersal that are much lower than
those of ciliates living in common habitats. Ciliates
living and growing on unusual 'islands' that are sep-
arated by large distances (e.g. the sea-ice of the
Arctic and the Antarctic) may rarely if ever be de-
tected in intermediate regions; but the evidence
does indicate the reality of global dispersal of these
'island' species, even if the magnitude of this dis-
persal is small compared to that of the many com-
mon ciliate morphospecies co-occurring in com-
mon habitats in, for example, the Antarctic, Nigeria
and Scotland.
We have recently (July 1997) obtained some sup-
porting evidence from a real 'island' - a small lake
lying in the crater of an extinct volcano in Victoria,
Australia. We are still adding species to the record
for this water body, but preliminary results indicate
that of the 80 ciliate species recorded, 79 are al-
ready known from Northern Europe. The only other
34 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel
laborious to discover synonyms. Another problem
that is certainly not unique to ciliates is that too
many 'new' species are still being described on the
basis of trivial differences, or in ignorance of species
descriptions that have already been published. One
likely consequence of the resolution of these prob-
lems is that our estimates of global species richness
may, in the course of time, show even better conver-
gence than they do at present. In addition, we may
also have some tentative evidence that the extrapo-
lations provide realistic estimates on a local scale.
We are engaged in an intensive long-term study of
the ciliate fauna in a natural, freshwater pond in Eng-
land (e.g. Finlay et al. 1988; 1996a,c). The number of
ciliate species that are predicted to find suitable
habitats in one hectare (the area of the pond) is 375
(from the polynomial in Fig. 3). Our list for the pond
currently contains 244 ciliate species (only one of
which may be new to science); and although the
number continues to grow with continued sampling
effort, it is becoming noticeably more difficult to
record additional species for this water body.
We have assumed throughout that ciliates are
ubiquitous. Absolute abundance is so large, and
passive dispersal so effective, that every species
has some probability of being transported, at some
point in time, anywhere in the biosphere. Each
species will grow and reproduce where it finds a
suitable habitat, and if the habitats are found in
many different parts of the world, that species will
be considered to have a cosmopolitan distribution.
But perhaps we are mistaken - perhaps we are un-
able to detect subtle but important differences sep-
arating ciliates, so we identify ciliates from different
places as the same species only because we are un-
able to tell them apart. These separate species
could have different spatial distributions, and in an
extreme case, a ciliate referred to as a cosmopolitan
morphospecies could consist of many similar
species, each with its own geographical distribution.
There is, however, one good piece of evidence indi-
cating that this is not usually the case. In some cili-
ate genera (e.g. Paramecium and Tetrahymena), a
biological species concept does apply. The different
syngens are in most cases morphologically indistin-
guishable, and yet they are readily identifiable using
laboratory tests of their mutual reproductive isola-
tion. We would expect this reproductive isolation to
be correlated with geographic isolation, but the evi-
dence is to the contrary. Most syngens in the Para-
mecium aurelia complex have cosmopolitan distri-
butions (Nyberg 1988), many in the Tetrahymena
pyriformis complex have been found on two or more
continents (Nanney and McCoy 1976), and the ap-
parent absence of species from other regions in the
world might easily be contradicted with additional
sampling effort (Corliss and Daggett 1983). It ap-
pears as if those ciliates holding the most promise of
revealing a species biogeography within a common
morphotype, fail to do just that.
A second argument against cosmopolitanism in
ciliates is fuelled by the so-called endemics. New
species do continue to be discovered. Invariably
these come from unusual or previously unexplored
habitats, such as solution lakes (Esteban et al.
1993), wetlands in tropical Africa (Dragesco and
Dragesco-Kerneis 1986 ) or Antarctic sea-ice (Petz
et al. 1995). The relevant point is that these species
are found in these places because of the habitats
that the places provide. This is graphically illustrated
by the species of sea-ice ciliates that appear to be
identical in the Arctic and in the Antarctic (Agatha et
al. 1993; Petz et al. 1995). There is also an undeni-
able tendency for 'endemics' to acquire a broader
geographical distribution in response to additional
sampling effort, and the true number is probably low
(Fenchel 1993; Foissner 1997). Wilbert and Kahan
(1981) described a very large and unusual ciliate
(Condylostoma reichi) from Solar Lake in Eilat. It was
subsequently found in tropical Africa (Dragesco and
Dragesco-Kerneis 1986), and a ciliate most closely
resembling C. reichi has recently been found in the
Antarctic (Petz et al. 1995). An 'endemic' of the
Hawaiian archipelago (Foissner 1994) was recently
found in wet moss by a river in central Spain (Olmo
and Tellez 1996).
The assumption of cosmopolitanism in free-living
ciliates is, in general, justified, and it may even be
true for the ciliates living in habitats that are rela-
tively rare. These ciliates will have lower absolute
global abundances and (for purely statistical rea-
sons) rates of dispersal that are much lower than
those of ciliates living in common habitats. Ciliates
living and growing on unusual 'islands' that are sep-
arated by large distances (e.g. the sea-ice of the
Arctic and the Antarctic) may rarely if ever be de-
tected in intermediate regions; but the evidence
does indicate the reality of global dispersal of these
'island' species, even if the magnitude of this dis-
persal is small compared to that of the many com-
mon ciliate morphospecies co-occurring in com-
mon habitats in, for example, the Antarctic, Nigeria
and Scotland.
We have recently (July 1997) obtained some sup-
porting evidence from a real 'island' - a small lake
lying in the crater of an extinct volcano in Victoria,
Australia. We are still adding species to the record
for this water body, but preliminary results indicate
that of the 80 ciliate species recorded, 79 are al-
ready known from Northern Europe. The only other
record for the remaining species (Oxytricha salmas-
traY is from tropical Africa (Dragesco and Dragesco-
Kernt3is, 1986). This directed search for 'endemics'
in a place where we might have had a realistic
chance of finding some, has so far failed to reveal
any.
Species-area relations, and extinctions
Two important features of the species-richness of
free-living ciliates become clear, and both are a con-
sequence of their small size. First, in comparison
with macroscopic animals and plants, individuals
and species are both very densely packed in nature.
A square metre of freshwater benthos will typically
contain 2x107
ciliates represented by 234 species.
The equivalent figures for the marine interstitial are
107
ciliates and 212 species. How do so many
species manage to live in a small area? The answer
is easily explained in terms of 'fractal geometry':
that the world is equally complex at all scales, so for
example 1cm2
of sediment could be as complex a
habitat for protozoa as a beech tree in mid-summer
is for insects. The reality of this phenomenon will of
course be obvious to anyone who has used a micro-
scope to examine a small sediment aggregate and
found attached peritrich ciliates, Chilodonella and
Aspidisca crawling and browsing over the surface,
Spirostomum and various small scuticociliates filter
feeding in the pore volume, and the neck of an em-
bedded Lacrymaria periodically emerging to grab
algae and other microbial food items.
The second important feature is the low rate of
species addition for increasing area. The best
known general equation for the relation is S = CN,
where S is number of species, A is area, and C and z
are constants that vary from one group of organisms
to another (MacArthur and Wilson 1967). In most
studies where the relationship has been fitted (Le.
the macroscopic flora and fauna of islands), z takes
a value in the range 0.2 to 0.35. The value is usually
smaller (0.12-0.17) when the areas are located
within continents (reflecting enhanced migration be-
tween areas); and birds (easily dispersed) have
lower values than land snails. The average slope of
the extrapolation for ciliates in Figure 3 (z = 0.043)
falls well below either of these ranges and is consis-
tent with the high rates of dispersal assumed for cili-
ates. In this connection it is interesting that Dodson
(1991, 1992) also reports a low value (z = 0.05) for
another group of relatively small and easily dis-
persed animals - the crustacean zooplankton of Eu-
ropean and North American lakes. He too, ascribes
the low value to high rates of immigration from
neighbouring areas.
Protozoan Diversity 35
One important implication of the low slope for the
ciliate species-area relationship is that the global di-
versity of ciliate species is largely unaffected by loss
of habitat. One can readily calculate (e.g. Wilson,
1992) that in the larger metazoans, with a typical z-
value of 0.3, a reduction in habitat area (e.g. of rain-
forest) to one tenth of its original size, will eventually
lead to loss of one half of the original number of
species. For ciliates (z = 0.043), the same reduction
in area would lead to a 10% reduction in species
number. But even this level of threatened extinction
is probably unrealistically severe, as a specific ciliate
habitat is unlikely to be lost simultaneously from all
places in the biosphere where it exists (and the
same ciliate species probably live in 'rainforests'
that are geographically isolated from each other).
Moreover, at a local level, habitat destruction is per-
haps only rarely so thorough that it reduces the
abundance of any ciliate species-population to such
an extent that stochastic extinction becomes likely.
If our extrapolation was based on only one
dataset, the closeness of the global estimate to that
obtained by taxonomic analysis might be consid-
ered fortuitous. The fact that the two independent
data sets can each be extrapolated to show the
same general species-area relation and that these
extrapolations converge with the additional inde-
pendent estimate of taxonomic analysis indicates
that our conclusions are firm: free-living ciliate
species are ubiquitous, many have cosmopolitan
distributions and their global species richness is rel-
atively low.
Methods
Marine data: The localities, sampling techniques
and enumeration methods are described in Fenchel
(1969). Sampling was concentrated within three
main areas, and at water depths down to 22 m: in
the 0resund, the Isefjord area, and in the Baltic
south of Stockholm. The largest data set is from
Helsing0r Beach (Denmark).
Freshwater data: The largest dataset we used
was derived from a study of the benthos of a lake
(Esthwaite Water) in the UK. These data were ob-
tained from monthly sampling in the period October
1978 to November 1981. A total of 228 Jenkin sedi-
ment cores were collected. The data from Airthrey
Loch in Scotland (UK) were obtained from examina-
tion of 92 sediment cores taken with approximately
monthly sampling at three sites in the period Jan-
uary 1975 to December 1976. The remainder of the
data were obtained from 18 excursions to sample
five shallow freshwater streams on the Jos Plateau
record for the remaining species (Oxytricha salmas-
traY is from tropical Africa (Dragesco and Dragesco-
Kernt3is, 1986). This directed search for 'endemics'
in a place where we might have had a realistic
chance of finding some, has so far failed to reveal
any.
Species-area relations, and extinctions
Two important features of the species-richness of
free-living ciliates become clear, and both are a con-
sequence of their small size. First, in comparison
with macroscopic animals and plants, individuals
and species are both very densely packed in nature.
A square metre of freshwater benthos will typically
contain 2x107
ciliates represented by 234 species.
The equivalent figures for the marine interstitial are
107
ciliates and 212 species. How do so many
species manage to live in a small area? The answer
is easily explained in terms of 'fractal geometry':
that the world is equally complex at all scales, so for
example 1cm2
of sediment could be as complex a
habitat for protozoa as a beech tree in mid-summer
is for insects. The reality of this phenomenon will of
course be obvious to anyone who has used a micro-
scope to examine a small sediment aggregate and
found attached peritrich ciliates, Chilodonella and
Aspidisca crawling and browsing over the surface,
Spirostomum and various small scuticociliates filter
feeding in the pore volume, and the neck of an em-
bedded Lacrymaria periodically emerging to grab
algae and other microbial food items.
The second important feature is the low rate of
species addition for increasing area. The best
known general equation for the relation is S = CN,
where S is number of species, A is area, and C and z
are constants that vary from one group of organisms
to another (MacArthur and Wilson 1967). In most
studies where the relationship has been fitted (Le.
the macroscopic flora and fauna of islands), z takes
a value in the range 0.2 to 0.35. The value is usually
smaller (0.12-0.17) when the areas are located
within continents (reflecting enhanced migration be-
tween areas); and birds (easily dispersed) have
lower values than land snails. The average slope of
the extrapolation for ciliates in Figure 3 (z = 0.043)
falls well below either of these ranges and is consis-
tent with the high rates of dispersal assumed for cili-
ates. In this connection it is interesting that Dodson
(1991, 1992) also reports a low value (z = 0.05) for
another group of relatively small and easily dis-
persed animals - the crustacean zooplankton of Eu-
ropean and North American lakes. He too, ascribes
the low value to high rates of immigration from
neighbouring areas.
Protozoan Diversity 35
One important implication of the low slope for the
ciliate species-area relationship is that the global di-
versity of ciliate species is largely unaffected by loss
of habitat. One can readily calculate (e.g. Wilson,
1992) that in the larger metazoans, with a typical z-
value of 0.3, a reduction in habitat area (e.g. of rain-
forest) to one tenth of its original size, will eventually
lead to loss of one half of the original number of
species. For ciliates (z = 0.043), the same reduction
in area would lead to a 10% reduction in species
number. But even this level of threatened extinction
is probably unrealistically severe, as a specific ciliate
habitat is unlikely to be lost simultaneously from all
places in the biosphere where it exists (and the
same ciliate species probably live in 'rainforests'
that are geographically isolated from each other).
Moreover, at a local level, habitat destruction is per-
haps only rarely so thorough that it reduces the
abundance of any ciliate species-population to such
an extent that stochastic extinction becomes likely.
If our extrapolation was based on only one
dataset, the closeness of the global estimate to that
obtained by taxonomic analysis might be consid-
ered fortuitous. The fact that the two independent
data sets can each be extrapolated to show the
same general species-area relation and that these
extrapolations converge with the additional inde-
pendent estimate of taxonomic analysis indicates
that our conclusions are firm: free-living ciliate
species are ubiquitous, many have cosmopolitan
distributions and their global species richness is rel-
atively low.
Methods
Marine data: The localities, sampling techniques
and enumeration methods are described in Fenchel
(1969). Sampling was concentrated within three
main areas, and at water depths down to 22 m: in
the 0resund, the Isefjord area, and in the Baltic
south of Stockholm. The largest data set is from
Helsing0r Beach (Denmark).
Freshwater data: The largest dataset we used
was derived from a study of the benthos of a lake
(Esthwaite Water) in the UK. These data were ob-
tained from monthly sampling in the period October
1978 to November 1981. A total of 228 Jenkin sedi-
ment cores were collected. The data from Airthrey
Loch in Scotland (UK) were obtained from examina-
tion of 92 sediment cores taken with approximately
monthly sampling at three sites in the period Jan-
uary 1975 to December 1976. The remainder of the
data were obtained from 18 excursions to sample
five shallow freshwater streams on the Jos Plateau
36 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel
in Nigeria, in the period December 1977 to May
1978. The enumeration methods used are described
in Finlay and Guhl (1992). Further information relat-
ing to the Airthrey and Esthwaite datasets appears
in Finlay (1980, 1982 respectively).
Taxonomic analysis: The method used in
analysing all ciliate species descriptions published
in the period 1758 to 1996, was published in Finlay
et al. (1996b). The dataset established therein has
been further analysed, with allocation of all free-liv-
ing ciliate species to one of two categories: marine,
and non-marine. Some ciliates (e.g. Cyclidium
glaucoma) live in the sea and in fresh water, so
numbers of these have been divided equally be-
tween the marine and non-marine categories. The
marine category was then further divided - into
those species that are typically interstitial, and
those that are not (e.g. tintinnids and other plank-
tonic ciliates). This procedure is not easily applied
to the freshwater ciliates, of which few can be clas-
sified as truly interstitial species. The interstitial
habitat is much rarer in the typically finely-grained
freshwater sediments, and many freshwater ciliates
perform seasonal benthic-planktonic migrations in
response to the development of deep-water anoxia
·(Finlay 1981). But many freshwater ciliates are ap-
parently well-adapted for a permanently planktonic
lifestyle (e.g. many oligotrichs), and we finally allo-
cated species to the freshwater benthos category if
they were not obviously planktonic, and if the
weight of evidence (our personal experience com-
bined with that in the published literature) indicated
that the benthos provided their 'preferred' habitat.
It may be noted that some (perhaps many) 'soil cili-
ates' also make a living in fresh waters (Foissner
1987); especially in riverine and littoral sediments.
These species are included in our 'freshwater ben-
thos' total in Table 1.
The species concept used throughout is the con-
cept of 'morphospecies' as described in Finlay et al.
(1996b).
Data handling: All data handling and statistical
processes were performed using Microsoft EXCEL
(5.0).
Acknowledgements
This work was supported financially by the Centre
for Ecology and Hydrology (NERC, United King-
dom), The British Council (newIMAGES), and the
Danish Natural Science Research Council. The in-
terim results from Australia are the product of an on-
going collaboration with Prof. PA Tyler, Deakin Uni-
versity, Australia.
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36 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel
in Nigeria, in the period December 1977 to May
1978. The enumeration methods used are described
in Finlay and Guhl (1992). Further information relat-
ing to the Airthrey and Esthwaite datasets appears
in Finlay (1980, 1982 respectively).
Taxonomic analysis: The method used in
analysing all ciliate species descriptions published
in the period 1758 to 1996, was published in Finlay
et al. (1996b). The dataset established therein has
been further analysed, with allocation of all free-liv-
ing ciliate species to one of two categories: marine,
and non-marine. Some ciliates (e.g. Cyclidium
glaucoma) live in the sea and in fresh water, so
numbers of these have been divided equally be-
tween the marine and non-marine categories. The
marine category was then further divided - into
those species that are typically interstitial, and
those that are not (e.g. tintinnids and other plank-
tonic ciliates). This procedure is not easily applied
to the freshwater ciliates, of which few can be clas-
sified as truly interstitial species. The interstitial
habitat is much rarer in the typically finely-grained
freshwater sediments, and many freshwater ciliates
perform seasonal benthic-planktonic migrations in
response to the development of deep-water anoxia
·(Finlay 1981). But many freshwater ciliates are ap-
parently well-adapted for a permanently planktonic
lifestyle (e.g. many oligotrichs), and we finally allo-
cated species to the freshwater benthos category if
they were not obviously planktonic, and if the
weight of evidence (our personal experience com-
bined with that in the published literature) indicated
that the benthos provided their 'preferred' habitat.
It may be noted that some (perhaps many) 'soil cili-
ates' also make a living in fresh waters (Foissner
1987); especially in riverine and littoral sediments.
These species are included in our 'freshwater ben-
thos' total in Table 1.
The species concept used throughout is the con-
cept of 'morphospecies' as described in Finlay et al.
(1996b).
Data handling: All data handling and statistical
processes were performed using Microsoft EXCEL
(5.0).
Acknowledgements
This work was supported financially by the Centre
for Ecology and Hydrology (NERC, United King-
dom), The British Council (newIMAGES), and the
Danish Natural Science Research Council. The in-
terim results from Australia are the product of an on-
going collaboration with Prof. PA Tyler, Deakin Uni-
versity, Australia.
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water. Pages In Lee JJ, Soldo AT (eds) Protocols in Pro-
tozology. Society of Protozoologists, Lawrence,
Kansas, pp B-2.1- 5
Foissner W (1987) Soil protozoa: fundamental prob-
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and testaceans, bioindicators, and guide to the litera-
ture. Prog Protistol 2: 69-212.
Foissner W (1994) Bryometopus hawaiiensis sp. n., a
new colpodid ciliate from a terrestrial biotope of the
Hawaiian Archipelago. Annals Naturhist Mus Wien 96B:
19-27
Foissner W (1997) Global soil ciliate (Protozoa, Cilio-
phora) diversity: a probability-based approach using
large sample collectives from Africa, Australia, and
Antarctica. Biodiv Conserv (In press)
Gaston K J (1992) Regional numbers of insect and
plant species. Funct Ecol6: 243-247
Holmberg 0, Pejler B (1972) On the terrestrial micro-
fauna of Surtsey during the summer 1970. Surtsey Res
Progr Rep 6: 69-72
Kristiansen J (1996) Dispersal of freshwater algae - a
review. Hydrobiologia 336: 151-157
Lackey JB (1938) A study of some ecologic factors af-
fecting the distribution of protozoa. Ecol Monogr 8:
503-527
Larsen J, Patterson OJ (1990) Some flagellates (Pro-
tista) from tropical marine sediments. J Nat Hist 24:
801-937
MacArthur RH, Wilson EO (1967) The Theory of Island
Biogeography. Princeton University Press, Princeton
Maguire B (1963) The passive dispersal of small
aquatic organisms and their colonization of isolated
bodies of water. Ecol Monogr33: 161-185
Maguire B, Belk 0 (1967) Paramecium transport by
land snails. J Protozool 14: 445-447
Protozoan Diversity 37
May RM (1988) How many species are there on Earth?
Science 241: 1441-1449
May RM (1990) How many species? Phil Trans RS
Lond 330: 293-304
Nanney OL, McCoy JW (1976) Characterization of the
species of the Tetrahymena pyriformis complex. Trans
Amer Microsc Soc 95: 664-682
Nyberg 0 (1988) The species concept and breeding
systems. In G6rtz HD (ed) Paramecium. Springer-Ver-
lag, Berlin, pp 41-58
Ogden CG, Hedley RH (1980) An Atlas of Freshwater
Testate Amoebae. British Museum/Oxford University
Press, Oxford
Olmo JL, Tellez C (1996). An European population of
Bryometopus hawaiiensis Foissner, 1994 (Protozoa: Cil-
iophora). Acta Protozool 35: 317-320
Parsons WM, Schlichting HE, Stewart KW (1966) In-
flight transport of algae and protozoa by selected
Odonata. Trans Amer Microsc Soc 85: 520-527
Patterson OJ, Simpson AGB (1996) Heterotrophic
flagellates from coastal marine and hypersaline sedi-
ments in Western Australia. Europ J Protistol 32:
423-448
Petz W, Song W, Wilbert N (1995) Taxonomy and ecol-
ogy of the ciliate fauna (Protozoa Ciliophora) in the en-
dopagial and pelagial of the Weddell Sea Antarctica.
Stapfia 40: 223pp.
Preston FW (1948) The commonness and rarity of
species. Ecology 29: 254-283
Sandon H (1927) The Composition and Distribution of
the Protozoan Fauna of the Soil. Oliver and Boyd, Edin-
burgh.
Schlichting HE, Sides SL (1969) The passive transport
of aquatic microorganisms by selected Hemiptera. J
EcoI57:759-764
Scourfield OJ (1944) The nannoplankton of bomb-
crater pools in Epping Forest. Essex Natural 27:
231-241
Smith HG (1978) The distribution and ecology of terres-
trial protozoa of sub-Antarctic and maritime Antarctic
islands. Scient Reps Brit Antarc Surv No 95,
BAS/NERC, Cambridge
Stout JO (1956) Reaction of ciliates to environmental
factors. Ecology 37: 178-191
Tyler PA (1996) Endemism in freshwater algae. Hydro-
biologia 336: 127-135
UNEP (1995) Global Biodiversity Assessment. Hey-
wood VH (exec ed) Cambridge University Press, Cam-
bridge
Wilbert N, Kahan 0 (1981) Ciliates of Solar Lake on the
Red Sea shore. Arch Protistenkd 124: 70-95
Wilson EO (1992) The diversity of life. Penguin, London
Zink RM (1996) Bird species diversity. Nature 381: 566
Finlay BJ (1997). The diversity and ecological role of
protozoa in fresh waters. In Sutcliffe DW, Jones JG
(eds) The Microbiological Quality of Water. FBAIISWA,
pp 108-125
Finlay BJ, Berninger U-G, Clarke KJ, Cowling AJ,
Hindle RM, Rogerson A (1988) On the abundance and
distribution of protozoa and their food in a productive
freshwater pond. Europ J Protistol23: 205-217
Finlay BJ, Esteban GF, Fenchel T (1996a) Global di-
versity and body size. Nature 383:132-133
Finlay BJ, Corliss JO, Esteban GF, Fenchel T (1996b)
Biodiversity at the microbial level: the number of free-
living ciliates in the biosphere. Quart Rev Bioi 71:
221-237
Finlay BJ, Maberly SC, Esteban GF (1996c) Spectacu-
lar abundance of ciliates in anoxic pond water: contri-
bution of symbiont photosynthesis to host respiratory
oxygen requirements. FEMS Microbiol Ecol 20:
229-235
Finlay BJ, Guhl BE (1992) Benthic sampling - fresh-
water. Pages In Lee JJ, Soldo AT (eds) Protocols in Pro-
tozology. Society of Protozoologists, Lawrence,
Kansas, pp B-2.1- 5
Foissner W (1987) Soil protozoa: fundamental prob-
lems, ecological significance, adaptations in ciliates
and testaceans, bioindicators, and guide to the litera-
ture. Prog Protistol 2: 69-212.
Foissner W (1994) Bryometopus hawaiiensis sp. n., a
new colpodid ciliate from a terrestrial biotope of the
Hawaiian Archipelago. Annals Naturhist Mus Wien 96B:
19-27
Foissner W (1997) Global soil ciliate (Protozoa, Cilio-
phora) diversity: a probability-based approach using
large sample collectives from Africa, Australia, and
Antarctica. Biodiv Conserv (In press)
Gaston K J (1992) Regional numbers of insect and
plant species. Funct Ecol6: 243-247
Holmberg 0, Pejler B (1972) On the terrestrial micro-
fauna of Surtsey during the summer 1970. Surtsey Res
Progr Rep 6: 69-72
Kristiansen J (1996) Dispersal of freshwater algae - a
review. Hydrobiologia 336: 151-157
Lackey JB (1938) A study of some ecologic factors af-
fecting the distribution of protozoa. Ecol Monogr 8:
503-527
Larsen J, Patterson OJ (1990) Some flagellates (Pro-
tista) from tropical marine sediments. J Nat Hist 24:
801-937
MacArthur RH, Wilson EO (1967) The Theory of Island
Biogeography. Princeton University Press, Princeton
Maguire B (1963) The passive dispersal of small
aquatic organisms and their colonization of isolated
bodies of water. Ecol Monogr33: 161-185
Maguire B, Belk 0 (1967) Paramecium transport by
land snails. J Protozool 14: 445-447
Protozoan Diversity 37
May RM (1988) How many species are there on Earth?
Science 241: 1441-1449
May RM (1990) How many species? Phil Trans RS
Lond 330: 293-304
Nanney OL, McCoy JW (1976) Characterization of the
species of the Tetrahymena pyriformis complex. Trans
Amer Microsc Soc 95: 664-682
Nyberg 0 (1988) The species concept and breeding
systems. In G6rtz HD (ed) Paramecium. Springer-Ver-
lag, Berlin, pp 41-58
Ogden CG, Hedley RH (1980) An Atlas of Freshwater
Testate Amoebae. British Museum/Oxford University
Press, Oxford
Olmo JL, Tellez C (1996). An European population of
Bryometopus hawaiiensis Foissner, 1994 (Protozoa: Cil-
iophora). Acta Protozool 35: 317-320
Parsons WM, Schlichting HE, Stewart KW (1966) In-
flight transport of algae and protozoa by selected
Odonata. Trans Amer Microsc Soc 85: 520-527
Patterson OJ, Simpson AGB (1996) Heterotrophic
flagellates from coastal marine and hypersaline sedi-
ments in Western Australia. Europ J Protistol 32:
423-448
Petz W, Song W, Wilbert N (1995) Taxonomy and ecol-
ogy of the ciliate fauna (Protozoa Ciliophora) in the en-
dopagial and pelagial of the Weddell Sea Antarctica.
Stapfia 40: 223pp.
Preston FW (1948) The commonness and rarity of
species. Ecology 29: 254-283
Sandon H (1927) The Composition and Distribution of
the Protozoan Fauna of the Soil. Oliver and Boyd, Edin-
burgh.
Schlichting HE, Sides SL (1969) The passive transport
of aquatic microorganisms by selected Hemiptera. J
EcoI57:759-764
Scourfield OJ (1944) The nannoplankton of bomb-
crater pools in Epping Forest. Essex Natural 27:
231-241
Smith HG (1978) The distribution and ecology of terres-
trial protozoa of sub-Antarctic and maritime Antarctic
islands. Scient Reps Brit Antarc Surv No 95,
BAS/NERC, Cambridge
Stout JO (1956) Reaction of ciliates to environmental
factors. Ecology 37: 178-191
Tyler PA (1996) Endemism in freshwater algae. Hydro-
biologia 336: 127-135
UNEP (1995) Global Biodiversity Assessment. Hey-
wood VH (exec ed) Cambridge University Press, Cam-
bridge
Wilbert N, Kahan 0 (1981) Ciliates of Solar Lake on the
Red Sea shore. Arch Protistenkd 124: 70-95
Wilson EO (1992) The diversity of life. Penguin, London
Zink RM (1996) Bird species diversity. Nature 381: 566

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Finlay j.b. ,g.f.esteban & t. fenchel (1998) .protozoan diversity.converging estimates of the global number of free living ciliate species .protist , (149).29-37

  • 1. Protist, Vol. 149, 29-37, February 1998 © Gustav Fischer Verlag ORIGINAL PAPER Protist Protozoan Diversity: Converging Estimates of the Global Number of Free-Living Ciliate Species Bland J. Finlaya,1, Genoveva F. Estebana, and Tom Fenchelb a Institute of Freshwater Ecology, Windermere laboratory, The Ferry House, Ambleside, Cumbria LA22 alP, UK b Marine Biological laboratory (University of Copenhagen), Strandpromenaden 5, DK - 3000, Helsingm, Denmark Submitted October 6, 1997; Accepted November 14, 1997 Monitoring Editor: Michael Melkonian Protozoa are the most abundant phagotrophs in the biosphere, but no scientific strategy has emerged that might allow accurate definition of the dimensions of protozoan diversity on a global scale. We have begun this task by searching for the common ground between taxonomy and ecology. We have used two methods - taxonomic analysis, and extrapolation from ecological datasets - to es- timate the global species richness of free-living ciliated protozoa in the marine interstitial and fresh- water benthos. The methods provide estimates that agree within a factor of two, and it is apparent that the species-area curves for ciliates must be almost flat (the slope z takes the very low value of 0.043 in the equation: [number of species] = [constant][area]Z). Insofar as independent ecological datasets can be extrapolated to show similiar, flat, species-area relations, and that these converge with an independent estimate from taxonomic analysis, we conclude that the great majority of free- living ciliates are ubiquitous. This strengthens our recent claim that the global species richness of free-living ciliated protozoa is relatively low (-3000). Introduction It is rather difficult to provide accurate estimates for the number of species in any of the larger taxonomic groups (see May 1988, 1990). Furthermore, the scale of the problem seems to be inversely related to the size of the organisms concerned. Estimating the global species richness of birds is probably an achievable task (Zink 1996), but more difficult for the insects (Gaston 1992) and, apparently, extraordinar- ily difficult for micro-organisms (see UNEP 1995), where in many cases we do not even have a clear idea of what a species is, let alone a sound strategy for estimating global diversity. 1 Corresponding author; fax 44-15394-46914; e-mail b.finlay@ife.ac.uk Some of the methods used for estimating species richness of larger organisms are inade- quate when it comes to micro-organisms. For ex- ample, it may under certain circumstances be pos- sible to extrapolate species numbers in size cate- gories down to about 1 em, but this becomes a very dubious procedure for size classes smaller than this (Fenchel 1993). The main reason may be the marked tendency towards cosmopolitanism in the smallest organisms. For these, barriers to migration and dispersal appear to be ineffective: thus rates of extinction and speciation may be low, and the same species will tend to be distributed worldwide. So the global species richness of micro-organisms could be relatively low, and the task of accurately estimating the number of microbial species (includ- Protist, Vol. 149, 29-37, February 1998 © Gustav Fischer Verlag ORIGINAL PAPER Protist Protozoan Diversity: Converging Estimates of the Global Number of Free-Living Ciliate Species Bland J. Finlaya,1, Genoveva F. Estebana, and Tom Fenchelb a Institute of Freshwater Ecology, Windermere laboratory, The Ferry House, Ambleside, Cumbria LA22 alP, UK b Marine Biological laboratory (University of Copenhagen), Strandpromenaden 5, DK - 3000, Helsingm, Denmark Submitted October 6, 1997; Accepted November 14, 1997 Monitoring Editor: Michael Melkonian Protozoa are the most abundant phagotrophs in the biosphere, but no scientific strategy has emerged that might allow accurate definition of the dimensions of protozoan diversity on a global scale. We have begun this task by searching for the common ground between taxonomy and ecology. We have used two methods - taxonomic analysis, and extrapolation from ecological datasets - to es- timate the global species richness of free-living ciliated protozoa in the marine interstitial and fresh- water benthos. The methods provide estimates that agree within a factor of two, and it is apparent that the species-area curves for ciliates must be almost flat (the slope z takes the very low value of 0.043 in the equation: [number of species] = [constant][area]Z). Insofar as independent ecological datasets can be extrapolated to show similiar, flat, species-area relations, and that these converge with an independent estimate from taxonomic analysis, we conclude that the great majority of free- living ciliates are ubiquitous. This strengthens our recent claim that the global species richness of free-living ciliated protozoa is relatively low (-3000). Introduction It is rather difficult to provide accurate estimates for the number of species in any of the larger taxonomic groups (see May 1988, 1990). Furthermore, the scale of the problem seems to be inversely related to the size of the organisms concerned. Estimating the global species richness of birds is probably an achievable task (Zink 1996), but more difficult for the insects (Gaston 1992) and, apparently, extraordinar- ily difficult for micro-organisms (see UNEP 1995), where in many cases we do not even have a clear idea of what a species is, let alone a sound strategy for estimating global diversity. 1 Corresponding author; fax 44-15394-46914; e-mail b.finlay@ife.ac.uk Some of the methods used for estimating species richness of larger organisms are inade- quate when it comes to micro-organisms. For ex- ample, it may under certain circumstances be pos- sible to extrapolate species numbers in size cate- gories down to about 1 em, but this becomes a very dubious procedure for size classes smaller than this (Fenchel 1993). The main reason may be the marked tendency towards cosmopolitanism in the smallest organisms. For these, barriers to migration and dispersal appear to be ineffective: thus rates of extinction and speciation may be low, and the same species will tend to be distributed worldwide. So the global species richness of micro-organisms could be relatively low, and the task of accurately estimating the number of microbial species (includ-
  • 2. 30 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel ing protozoa) may be simpler than previously thought. What evidence is there that protozoan species are typically cosmopolitan and that the global number of these species is modest? We have begun to an- swer this question for one large protozoan group in particular - the ciliates. There are four main bodies of evidence. First, and in common with most other groups of protists, there is no good evidence that ciliates have a biogeography (Bary 1950; Bowers and Pratt 1995; Corliss 1974; Ekebom et al. 1996; Kristiansen 1996; Lackey 1938; Larsen and Patter- son 1990; Ogden and Hedley 1980; Patterson and Simpson 1996; Sandon 1927; Stout 1956; Tyler 1996). On the contrary, it seems that the same ciliate species are found wherever their preferred habitat is found (e.g. Smith 1978). Second, enrichment culture experiments indicate that local species richness of ciliates is a significant proportion of the global species richness (Fenchel et al. 1997; Finlay et al. 1996a). Third, the diversity of free-living ciliate species described in the international literature is a relatively small number (close to 3000, after revi- sion), and unlikely to increase significantly in the fu- ture (Finlay et al. 1996b). Fourth, ciliates and other protists have high absolute abundance and, in many cases, effective passive dispersal (e.g. Maguire 1963; Parsons et al. 1966; Maguire and Belk 1967; Schlichting and Sides 1969; Kristiansen 1996; Finlay 1997). Much evidence indicates that they are contin- ually being distributed everywhere', and newly- formed habitats such as freshwater ponds and vol- canic islands are rapidly colonised (e.g. Holmberg and Pejler 1972; Scourfield 1944). Free-living ciliates may, in fact, be ubiquitous. If we take this assumption of ubiquity and use it to extrapolate from ecological datasets for relatively small areas to produce global estimates of the num- ber of ciliate species, will we obtain estimates that are similar to the global number of nominal ciliate species? We have tested this proposition, using large datasets for free-living ciliates in the marine in- terstitial and in the freshwater benthos. The cate- gory 'free-living ciliates' is here defined as all those extant ciliates that do not live exclusively as gut symbionts (e.g. rumen ciliates), or as parasites or symphorionts of specific metazoans. A detailed list of taxa considered not to be free-living is given in Finlay et al. (1996b). Results The ecological data for numbers and abundance of ciliate species in marine and freshwater sites are summarised in Table 1. As we also have data for the numbers of individuals of each species, the species abundance data can be illustrated as frequency curves. Using the original method of Preston (1948), with log2 octaves on the abscissa (Le. each succes- sive octave represents a doubling in abundance), we create species curves indicating that most species are of intermediate abundance, a few species are very abundant, and some are very rare. A normal curve superimposed upon the logarithmic abun- dance data (a 'lognormal' distribution) provides an adequate fit (Figs. 1a, b). In this case, as is often so with ecological data, the distribution is truncated, al- though nearly 'unveiled' (Le. indicating that most species have been recorded). But this message is misleading, for it fails to take account of the poten- tial ciliate diversity - the true number of ciliate species present, but not detected during the times- pan of the sampling programme. Many of the cryptic Table 1. Summary information from ecological datasets with independent estimates for the global number of ciliate species in the marine interstitial and in the freshwater benthos Ecological Datasets Global Estimate Based on: Number of Number of Extrapolation Taxonomic ciliates ciliate species from ecological analysis* recorded recorded datasets Marine Helsing0r Beach 48186 85 597 793 Interstitial All marine sites 79342 151 Freshwater Esthwaite Water 20486 104 732 1370 Benthos All freshwater sites 35837 125 *Current estimated numbers for all nominal marine and non-marine free-living ciliate species are 1592 and 2152 re- spectively. These numbers include, for example, planktonic species, many suctorians, and those ciliates found so far only in soil. 30 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel ing protozoa) may be simpler than previously thought. What evidence is there that protozoan species are typically cosmopolitan and that the global number of these species is modest? We have begun to an- swer this question for one large protozoan group in particular - the ciliates. There are four main bodies of evidence. First, and in common with most other groups of protists, there is no good evidence that ciliates have a biogeography (Bary 1950; Bowers and Pratt 1995; Corliss 1974; Ekebom et al. 1996; Kristiansen 1996; Lackey 1938; Larsen and Patter- son 1990; Ogden and Hedley 1980; Patterson and Simpson 1996; Sandon 1927; Stout 1956; Tyler 1996). On the contrary, it seems that the same ciliate species are found wherever their preferred habitat is found (e.g. Smith 1978). Second, enrichment culture experiments indicate that local species richness of ciliates is a significant proportion of the global species richness (Fenchel et al. 1997; Finlay et al. 1996a). Third, the diversity of free-living ciliate species described in the international literature is a relatively small number (close to 3000, after revi- sion), and unlikely to increase significantly in the fu- ture (Finlay et al. 1996b). Fourth, ciliates and other protists have high absolute abundance and, in many cases, effective passive dispersal (e.g. Maguire 1963; Parsons et al. 1966; Maguire and Belk 1967; Schlichting and Sides 1969; Kristiansen 1996; Finlay 1997). Much evidence indicates that they are contin- ually being distributed everywhere', and newly- formed habitats such as freshwater ponds and vol- canic islands are rapidly colonised (e.g. Holmberg and Pejler 1972; Scourfield 1944). Free-living ciliates may, in fact, be ubiquitous. If we take this assumption of ubiquity and use it to extrapolate from ecological datasets for relatively small areas to produce global estimates of the num- ber of ciliate species, will we obtain estimates that are similar to the global number of nominal ciliate species? We have tested this proposition, using large datasets for free-living ciliates in the marine in- terstitial and in the freshwater benthos. The cate- gory 'free-living ciliates' is here defined as all those extant ciliates that do not live exclusively as gut symbionts (e.g. rumen ciliates), or as parasites or symphorionts of specific metazoans. A detailed list of taxa considered not to be free-living is given in Finlay et al. (1996b). Results The ecological data for numbers and abundance of ciliate species in marine and freshwater sites are summarised in Table 1. As we also have data for the numbers of individuals of each species, the species abundance data can be illustrated as frequency curves. Using the original method of Preston (1948), with log2 octaves on the abscissa (Le. each succes- sive octave represents a doubling in abundance), we create species curves indicating that most species are of intermediate abundance, a few species are very abundant, and some are very rare. A normal curve superimposed upon the logarithmic abun- dance data (a 'lognormal' distribution) provides an adequate fit (Figs. 1a, b). In this case, as is often so with ecological data, the distribution is truncated, al- though nearly 'unveiled' (Le. indicating that most species have been recorded). But this message is misleading, for it fails to take account of the poten- tial ciliate diversity - the true number of ciliate species present, but not detected during the times- pan of the sampling programme. Many of the cryptic Table 1. Summary information from ecological datasets with independent estimates for the global number of ciliate species in the marine interstitial and in the freshwater benthos Ecological Datasets Global Estimate Based on: Number of Number of Extrapolation Taxonomic ciliates ciliate species from ecological analysis* recorded recorded datasets Marine Helsing0r Beach 48186 85 597 793 Interstitial All marine sites 79342 151 Freshwater Esthwaite Water 20486 104 732 1370 Benthos All freshwater sites 35837 125 *Current estimated numbers for all nominal marine and non-marine free-living ciliate species are 1592 and 2152 re- spectively. These numbers include, for example, planktonic species, many suctorians, and those ciliates found so far only in soil.
  • 3. 25 20 a 25 20 Protozoan Diversity 31 b ~ :l 15 U o ~ ~ Co III ~ '2 10 Co V) ~ > ~ 15 o ~ ~ Co III ~ '2 10 Co V) 5 1 2 I. 16 256 4096 1 2 I. 16 256 4096 Individuals per species Individuals per species Figures 1a, b. Lognormal distributions fitted to the ciliate species abundance data (log2) obtained from the marine interstitial (a) and the freshwater benthos (b). Following Preston's (1948) terminology, the constant a (related to the logarithmic standard deviation by the equation a =(1/[202])1/2) in the fitted curves takes the value 0.22 (marine) and 0.24 (freshwater). As drawn here, the y-axis is the "veil line", to the left of which lie those hypothetically rare ciliate species that were not observed in the sampling programme (Le. abundance <1). The bar value shown for these is an estimate, being equivalent to half of the number of species each represented by a single individual. (e.g. encysted) and rare species present would have required specific conditions in order to grow, repro- duce and become detectable. Over the extended periods of the sampling programmes, some of these would have become detectable but it is likely that many of the species that were present would not have been recorded. Some would never have been numerous, and others would have remained rare be- cause they were migrants from the surrounding area and beyond who had been transported to a place where they awaited the arrival of conditions suitable for population growth. One way to find the rare species would be to look at a larger area, for that will probably support additional ciliate niches; so some species that remained undetected in the original, small area may find the conditions they require for population growth (and detection) in the larger area. If the ecological datasets are plotted as ranked species abundances (logarithmic), we find that the curves become linear (Figs. 2a,b): that is to say, the abundances of the successively rarer species de- crease logarithmically. Furthermore, the slopes of these trends seem insensitive to the size of the datasets. In Figure 2a for example, the slope for the Helsing0r Beach data is roughly the same as that for the larger dataset that includes all the marine inter- stitial sites. The same message is obvious in the freshwater data. This feature is consistent with the idea of the ubiquity of species: if the larger datasets had included a number of species with exclusively local distributions, their respective slopes would be less steep than those for the smaller datasets from smaller areas. Now, if our datasets had been much larger, as if we had examined much larger areas of sediment, additional ciliate niches would have been included. We would also have found a proportionate increase in numbers of the more common species originally recorded. It is reasonable therefore to extend each terminal linear trend below an abundance of one cil- iate (Figs. 2a, b) to indicate the additional species that would be recovered by examining a larger area. Take the example of the marine data (Fig. 2a). The total number of ciliates found was 79342, and these 25 20 a 25 20 Protozoan Diversity 31 b ~ :l 15 U o ~ ~ Co III ~ '2 10 Co V) ~ > ~ 15 o ~ ~ Co III ~ '2 10 Co V) 5 1 2 I. 16 256 4096 1 2 I. 16 256 4096 Individuals per species Individuals per species Figures 1a, b. Lognormal distributions fitted to the ciliate species abundance data (log2) obtained from the marine interstitial (a) and the freshwater benthos (b). Following Preston's (1948) terminology, the constant a (related to the logarithmic standard deviation by the equation a =(1/[202])1/2) in the fitted curves takes the value 0.22 (marine) and 0.24 (freshwater). As drawn here, the y-axis is the "veil line", to the left of which lie those hypothetically rare ciliate species that were not observed in the sampling programme (Le. abundance <1). The bar value shown for these is an estimate, being equivalent to half of the number of species each represented by a single individual. (e.g. encysted) and rare species present would have required specific conditions in order to grow, repro- duce and become detectable. Over the extended periods of the sampling programmes, some of these would have become detectable but it is likely that many of the species that were present would not have been recorded. Some would never have been numerous, and others would have remained rare be- cause they were migrants from the surrounding area and beyond who had been transported to a place where they awaited the arrival of conditions suitable for population growth. One way to find the rare species would be to look at a larger area, for that will probably support additional ciliate niches; so some species that remained undetected in the original, small area may find the conditions they require for population growth (and detection) in the larger area. If the ecological datasets are plotted as ranked species abundances (logarithmic), we find that the curves become linear (Figs. 2a,b): that is to say, the abundances of the successively rarer species de- crease logarithmically. Furthermore, the slopes of these trends seem insensitive to the size of the datasets. In Figure 2a for example, the slope for the Helsing0r Beach data is roughly the same as that for the larger dataset that includes all the marine inter- stitial sites. The same message is obvious in the freshwater data. This feature is consistent with the idea of the ubiquity of species: if the larger datasets had included a number of species with exclusively local distributions, their respective slopes would be less steep than those for the smaller datasets from smaller areas. Now, if our datasets had been much larger, as if we had examined much larger areas of sediment, additional ciliate niches would have been included. We would also have found a proportionate increase in numbers of the more common species originally recorded. It is reasonable therefore to extend each terminal linear trend below an abundance of one cil- iate (Figs. 2a, b) to indicate the additional species that would be recovered by examining a larger area. Take the example of the marine data (Fig. 2a). The total number of ciliates found was 79342, and these
  • 4. No. of ciliates No. of ciliates c.v N 10000 100000 I I ~ ~• ~ c.... 'TI S' ~ P :n m !eo CD 0- $I) .~ $I) ~ Co :-f 'TI CD ~ o :::r ~• ~~, 100+ ~ () , ~ 10 C> ~~ ~ -1 I ~~ -0 50 100 150 200 250 300 Species sequence ~•o o 1000 to. . • 10000 t 100000 I I 300 Species sequence 200 250150 100 50 10 • ~ • ~, , ~.... . .100 V······· ~ % '%o 't.J '- ~~. I ~ ~~~~;:-------;-1 I o 1000 a b Figures 2a, b. Rank-abundance plots of the ecological data from the marine interstitial (a) and the freshwater benthos (b). The terminal components in each are assumed to be linear. a: open symbols represent ciliates in Helsing0r Beach; filled symbols, all marine sites (see Table 1). b: open symbols represent ciliates in Esthwaite Water; filled, all freshwater sites (see Table 2). See text for method of extrapolation. The number of ciliate species esti- mated for 1m2 of the marine interstitial is 212 (a), and 234 for 1 m2 of freshwater benthos (b). No. of ciliates No. of ciliates 100000 . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , 1 0 0 0 0 0 . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , 10000 p • ~ 300250 Species sequence 200150 ~;, ~~ " ~ ~ -.1 +---+-~...--.___+_....-.-+-__~_ _-+-..........__..........._~,.>..1·..........._~---+---I o 50 100 10 100 I- ~•o o 1000 0 . • • 10000 300 Species sequence • ~ • 0' ~ " '&l .- b '- ~ ~ -1 -I-_--+-~.......... .,......... ........___.........._..,,1 +_ ....j o 50 100 150 200 250 10 100 1000 a b Figures 2a, b. Rank-abundance plots of the ecological data from the marine interstitial (a) and the freshwater benthos (b). The terminal components in each are assumed to be linear. a: open symbols represent ciliates in HelsingeJr Beach; filled symbols, all marine sites (see Table 1). b: open symbols represent ciliates in Esthwaite Water; filled, all freshwater sites (see Table 2). See text for method of extrapolation. The number of ciliate species esti- mated for 1m2 of the marine interstitial is 212 (a), and 234 for 1 m2 of freshwater benthos (b).
  • 5. Protozoan Diversity 33 6 Insects 10 Ciliates 5o Log Area (km 2 ) -5 2 5 4 O+------f-------+------+---------l -10 3 III III Q) c: .c:(.) ~ In Q) '0 Q) a. (J) Cl o ...J Figure 3. Species-area relation- ships for freshwater benthic and marine interstitial ciliates obtained by extrapolation from the ecologi- cal datasets (upper curve "all freshwater sites"; lower curve "all marine sites"), plotted with global species richness estimated inde- pendently from taxonomic analysis (1'" freshwater benthos; A, marine interstitial). The origins of the ex- trapolations are the ecological data given in Table 1, and the curves are polynomials (marine in- terstitial: y =-0.0031x2 + 0.0383x + 2.587; freshwater benthos: y = - 0.0021x2 + 0.0433x + 2.669). The linear least squares regression computed through the combined ciliate extrapolations is: y =0.043x + 2.571 ; r2 =0.96 (Le. z =0.043). In marked contrast, the regression drawn for the insects (using data for various regions of the world, assimilated by Gaston [1992]), has az value of 0.31. belonged to 151 species. This is the total ciliate complement of 87cm2 of sediment, and in this area, the rarest ciliate species was represented by a sin- gle individual. Now, suppose that we could record every ciliate in the 1 m2 surrounding (and including) our original 87 cm2 and that our rare ciliate retained the same degree of rarity within this enlarged area. This rare species would now be represented by an estimated 115 individuals, as illustrated in Figure 2a by moving vertically upwards to this value. All other ciliate species will keep the same relative abun- dances they had in the smaller area, so the linear slope of the new, upwards displaced, rank-abun- dance plot will be the same as the original (broken line terminating with an arrow, in Figs 2a, b). This new theoretical plot (for 1 m2) indicates that the cili- ate with an abundance of 115 individuals per 1 m2 will, when the additional species are added to the rank abundance plot, terminate the species se- quence at 212 species (Le. there are estimated to be 212 species in 1 m2 , when the rarest species in that area is represented by a single individual). The same procedure can be used to extrapolate to areas on a 'global' scale (e.g. 2x106 km2 - the area of inland fresh waters in the world) in Figure 3, at which point the projected total is 597 species. When the same procedure is carried out for the freshwater benthic ciliates, the projected total is 732 species (Table 1). Discussion We find that the global extrapolations are within a factor of two of the numbers of species derived from an analysis of species descriptions in the interna- tional published literature (Table 1). Furthermore, there is good reason for believing that the corre- spondence between the two types of estimate may be even better than this, because the number of species estimated from taxonomic analysis is prob- ably still too high. There is no doubt that many syn- onyms remain embedded in the published literature, especially in the many crowded genera that require taxonomic revision (see Finlay et al. 1996b). One problem that may be unique to the ciliates (and pos- sibly other protists) is the practice of creating new genera to accommodate the overflow from crowded genera. This has produced a very large number of single-species genera (372 out of a total of 774 cili- ate genera; Finlay et al. 1996b), making it even more Protozoan Diversity 33 6 Insects 10 Ciliates 5o Log Area (km 2 ) -5 2 5 4 O+------f-------+------+---------l -10 3 III III Q) c: .c:(.) ~ In Q) '0 Q) a. (J) Cl o ...J Figure 3. Species-area relation- ships for freshwater benthic and marine interstitial ciliates obtained by extrapolation from the ecologi- cal datasets (upper curve "all freshwater sites"; lower curve "all marine sites"), plotted with global species richness estimated inde- pendently from taxonomic analysis (1'" freshwater benthos; A, marine interstitial). The origins of the ex- trapolations are the ecological data given in Table 1, and the curves are polynomials (marine in- terstitial: y =-0.0031x2 + 0.0383x + 2.587; freshwater benthos: y = - 0.0021x2 + 0.0433x + 2.669). The linear least squares regression computed through the combined ciliate extrapolations is: y =0.043x + 2.571 ; r2 =0.96 (Le. z =0.043). In marked contrast, the regression drawn for the insects (using data for various regions of the world, assimilated by Gaston [1992]), has az value of 0.31. belonged to 151 species. This is the total ciliate complement of 87cm2 of sediment, and in this area, the rarest ciliate species was represented by a sin- gle individual. Now, suppose that we could record every ciliate in the 1 m2 surrounding (and including) our original 87 cm2 and that our rare ciliate retained the same degree of rarity within this enlarged area. This rare species would now be represented by an estimated 115 individuals, as illustrated in Figure 2a by moving vertically upwards to this value. All other ciliate species will keep the same relative abun- dances they had in the smaller area, so the linear slope of the new, upwards displaced, rank-abun- dance plot will be the same as the original (broken line terminating with an arrow, in Figs 2a, b). This new theoretical plot (for 1 m2) indicates that the cili- ate with an abundance of 115 individuals per 1 m2 will, when the additional species are added to the rank abundance plot, terminate the species se- quence at 212 species (Le. there are estimated to be 212 species in 1 m2 , when the rarest species in that area is represented by a single individual). The same procedure can be used to extrapolate to areas on a 'global' scale (e.g. 2x106 km2 - the area of inland fresh waters in the world) in Figure 3, at which point the projected total is 597 species. When the same procedure is carried out for the freshwater benthic ciliates, the projected total is 732 species (Table 1). Discussion We find that the global extrapolations are within a factor of two of the numbers of species derived from an analysis of species descriptions in the interna- tional published literature (Table 1). Furthermore, there is good reason for believing that the corre- spondence between the two types of estimate may be even better than this, because the number of species estimated from taxonomic analysis is prob- ably still too high. There is no doubt that many syn- onyms remain embedded in the published literature, especially in the many crowded genera that require taxonomic revision (see Finlay et al. 1996b). One problem that may be unique to the ciliates (and pos- sibly other protists) is the practice of creating new genera to accommodate the overflow from crowded genera. This has produced a very large number of single-species genera (372 out of a total of 774 cili- ate genera; Finlay et al. 1996b), making it even more
  • 6. 34 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel laborious to discover synonyms. Another problem that is certainly not unique to ciliates is that too many 'new' species are still being described on the basis of trivial differences, or in ignorance of species descriptions that have already been published. One likely consequence of the resolution of these prob- lems is that our estimates of global species richness may, in the course of time, show even better conver- gence than they do at present. In addition, we may also have some tentative evidence that the extrapo- lations provide realistic estimates on a local scale. We are engaged in an intensive long-term study of the ciliate fauna in a natural, freshwater pond in Eng- land (e.g. Finlay et al. 1988; 1996a,c). The number of ciliate species that are predicted to find suitable habitats in one hectare (the area of the pond) is 375 (from the polynomial in Fig. 3). Our list for the pond currently contains 244 ciliate species (only one of which may be new to science); and although the number continues to grow with continued sampling effort, it is becoming noticeably more difficult to record additional species for this water body. We have assumed throughout that ciliates are ubiquitous. Absolute abundance is so large, and passive dispersal so effective, that every species has some probability of being transported, at some point in time, anywhere in the biosphere. Each species will grow and reproduce where it finds a suitable habitat, and if the habitats are found in many different parts of the world, that species will be considered to have a cosmopolitan distribution. But perhaps we are mistaken - perhaps we are un- able to detect subtle but important differences sep- arating ciliates, so we identify ciliates from different places as the same species only because we are un- able to tell them apart. These separate species could have different spatial distributions, and in an extreme case, a ciliate referred to as a cosmopolitan morphospecies could consist of many similar species, each with its own geographical distribution. There is, however, one good piece of evidence indi- cating that this is not usually the case. In some cili- ate genera (e.g. Paramecium and Tetrahymena), a biological species concept does apply. The different syngens are in most cases morphologically indistin- guishable, and yet they are readily identifiable using laboratory tests of their mutual reproductive isola- tion. We would expect this reproductive isolation to be correlated with geographic isolation, but the evi- dence is to the contrary. Most syngens in the Para- mecium aurelia complex have cosmopolitan distri- butions (Nyberg 1988), many in the Tetrahymena pyriformis complex have been found on two or more continents (Nanney and McCoy 1976), and the ap- parent absence of species from other regions in the world might easily be contradicted with additional sampling effort (Corliss and Daggett 1983). It ap- pears as if those ciliates holding the most promise of revealing a species biogeography within a common morphotype, fail to do just that. A second argument against cosmopolitanism in ciliates is fuelled by the so-called endemics. New species do continue to be discovered. Invariably these come from unusual or previously unexplored habitats, such as solution lakes (Esteban et al. 1993), wetlands in tropical Africa (Dragesco and Dragesco-Kerneis 1986 ) or Antarctic sea-ice (Petz et al. 1995). The relevant point is that these species are found in these places because of the habitats that the places provide. This is graphically illustrated by the species of sea-ice ciliates that appear to be identical in the Arctic and in the Antarctic (Agatha et al. 1993; Petz et al. 1995). There is also an undeni- able tendency for 'endemics' to acquire a broader geographical distribution in response to additional sampling effort, and the true number is probably low (Fenchel 1993; Foissner 1997). Wilbert and Kahan (1981) described a very large and unusual ciliate (Condylostoma reichi) from Solar Lake in Eilat. It was subsequently found in tropical Africa (Dragesco and Dragesco-Kerneis 1986), and a ciliate most closely resembling C. reichi has recently been found in the Antarctic (Petz et al. 1995). An 'endemic' of the Hawaiian archipelago (Foissner 1994) was recently found in wet moss by a river in central Spain (Olmo and Tellez 1996). The assumption of cosmopolitanism in free-living ciliates is, in general, justified, and it may even be true for the ciliates living in habitats that are rela- tively rare. These ciliates will have lower absolute global abundances and (for purely statistical rea- sons) rates of dispersal that are much lower than those of ciliates living in common habitats. Ciliates living and growing on unusual 'islands' that are sep- arated by large distances (e.g. the sea-ice of the Arctic and the Antarctic) may rarely if ever be de- tected in intermediate regions; but the evidence does indicate the reality of global dispersal of these 'island' species, even if the magnitude of this dis- persal is small compared to that of the many com- mon ciliate morphospecies co-occurring in com- mon habitats in, for example, the Antarctic, Nigeria and Scotland. We have recently (July 1997) obtained some sup- porting evidence from a real 'island' - a small lake lying in the crater of an extinct volcano in Victoria, Australia. We are still adding species to the record for this water body, but preliminary results indicate that of the 80 ciliate species recorded, 79 are al- ready known from Northern Europe. The only other 34 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel laborious to discover synonyms. Another problem that is certainly not unique to ciliates is that too many 'new' species are still being described on the basis of trivial differences, or in ignorance of species descriptions that have already been published. One likely consequence of the resolution of these prob- lems is that our estimates of global species richness may, in the course of time, show even better conver- gence than they do at present. In addition, we may also have some tentative evidence that the extrapo- lations provide realistic estimates on a local scale. We are engaged in an intensive long-term study of the ciliate fauna in a natural, freshwater pond in Eng- land (e.g. Finlay et al. 1988; 1996a,c). The number of ciliate species that are predicted to find suitable habitats in one hectare (the area of the pond) is 375 (from the polynomial in Fig. 3). Our list for the pond currently contains 244 ciliate species (only one of which may be new to science); and although the number continues to grow with continued sampling effort, it is becoming noticeably more difficult to record additional species for this water body. We have assumed throughout that ciliates are ubiquitous. Absolute abundance is so large, and passive dispersal so effective, that every species has some probability of being transported, at some point in time, anywhere in the biosphere. Each species will grow and reproduce where it finds a suitable habitat, and if the habitats are found in many different parts of the world, that species will be considered to have a cosmopolitan distribution. But perhaps we are mistaken - perhaps we are un- able to detect subtle but important differences sep- arating ciliates, so we identify ciliates from different places as the same species only because we are un- able to tell them apart. These separate species could have different spatial distributions, and in an extreme case, a ciliate referred to as a cosmopolitan morphospecies could consist of many similar species, each with its own geographical distribution. There is, however, one good piece of evidence indi- cating that this is not usually the case. In some cili- ate genera (e.g. Paramecium and Tetrahymena), a biological species concept does apply. The different syngens are in most cases morphologically indistin- guishable, and yet they are readily identifiable using laboratory tests of their mutual reproductive isola- tion. We would expect this reproductive isolation to be correlated with geographic isolation, but the evi- dence is to the contrary. Most syngens in the Para- mecium aurelia complex have cosmopolitan distri- butions (Nyberg 1988), many in the Tetrahymena pyriformis complex have been found on two or more continents (Nanney and McCoy 1976), and the ap- parent absence of species from other regions in the world might easily be contradicted with additional sampling effort (Corliss and Daggett 1983). It ap- pears as if those ciliates holding the most promise of revealing a species biogeography within a common morphotype, fail to do just that. A second argument against cosmopolitanism in ciliates is fuelled by the so-called endemics. New species do continue to be discovered. Invariably these come from unusual or previously unexplored habitats, such as solution lakes (Esteban et al. 1993), wetlands in tropical Africa (Dragesco and Dragesco-Kerneis 1986 ) or Antarctic sea-ice (Petz et al. 1995). The relevant point is that these species are found in these places because of the habitats that the places provide. This is graphically illustrated by the species of sea-ice ciliates that appear to be identical in the Arctic and in the Antarctic (Agatha et al. 1993; Petz et al. 1995). There is also an undeni- able tendency for 'endemics' to acquire a broader geographical distribution in response to additional sampling effort, and the true number is probably low (Fenchel 1993; Foissner 1997). Wilbert and Kahan (1981) described a very large and unusual ciliate (Condylostoma reichi) from Solar Lake in Eilat. It was subsequently found in tropical Africa (Dragesco and Dragesco-Kerneis 1986), and a ciliate most closely resembling C. reichi has recently been found in the Antarctic (Petz et al. 1995). An 'endemic' of the Hawaiian archipelago (Foissner 1994) was recently found in wet moss by a river in central Spain (Olmo and Tellez 1996). The assumption of cosmopolitanism in free-living ciliates is, in general, justified, and it may even be true for the ciliates living in habitats that are rela- tively rare. These ciliates will have lower absolute global abundances and (for purely statistical rea- sons) rates of dispersal that are much lower than those of ciliates living in common habitats. Ciliates living and growing on unusual 'islands' that are sep- arated by large distances (e.g. the sea-ice of the Arctic and the Antarctic) may rarely if ever be de- tected in intermediate regions; but the evidence does indicate the reality of global dispersal of these 'island' species, even if the magnitude of this dis- persal is small compared to that of the many com- mon ciliate morphospecies co-occurring in com- mon habitats in, for example, the Antarctic, Nigeria and Scotland. We have recently (July 1997) obtained some sup- porting evidence from a real 'island' - a small lake lying in the crater of an extinct volcano in Victoria, Australia. We are still adding species to the record for this water body, but preliminary results indicate that of the 80 ciliate species recorded, 79 are al- ready known from Northern Europe. The only other
  • 7. record for the remaining species (Oxytricha salmas- traY is from tropical Africa (Dragesco and Dragesco- Kernt3is, 1986). This directed search for 'endemics' in a place where we might have had a realistic chance of finding some, has so far failed to reveal any. Species-area relations, and extinctions Two important features of the species-richness of free-living ciliates become clear, and both are a con- sequence of their small size. First, in comparison with macroscopic animals and plants, individuals and species are both very densely packed in nature. A square metre of freshwater benthos will typically contain 2x107 ciliates represented by 234 species. The equivalent figures for the marine interstitial are 107 ciliates and 212 species. How do so many species manage to live in a small area? The answer is easily explained in terms of 'fractal geometry': that the world is equally complex at all scales, so for example 1cm2 of sediment could be as complex a habitat for protozoa as a beech tree in mid-summer is for insects. The reality of this phenomenon will of course be obvious to anyone who has used a micro- scope to examine a small sediment aggregate and found attached peritrich ciliates, Chilodonella and Aspidisca crawling and browsing over the surface, Spirostomum and various small scuticociliates filter feeding in the pore volume, and the neck of an em- bedded Lacrymaria periodically emerging to grab algae and other microbial food items. The second important feature is the low rate of species addition for increasing area. The best known general equation for the relation is S = CN, where S is number of species, A is area, and C and z are constants that vary from one group of organisms to another (MacArthur and Wilson 1967). In most studies where the relationship has been fitted (Le. the macroscopic flora and fauna of islands), z takes a value in the range 0.2 to 0.35. The value is usually smaller (0.12-0.17) when the areas are located within continents (reflecting enhanced migration be- tween areas); and birds (easily dispersed) have lower values than land snails. The average slope of the extrapolation for ciliates in Figure 3 (z = 0.043) falls well below either of these ranges and is consis- tent with the high rates of dispersal assumed for cili- ates. In this connection it is interesting that Dodson (1991, 1992) also reports a low value (z = 0.05) for another group of relatively small and easily dis- persed animals - the crustacean zooplankton of Eu- ropean and North American lakes. He too, ascribes the low value to high rates of immigration from neighbouring areas. Protozoan Diversity 35 One important implication of the low slope for the ciliate species-area relationship is that the global di- versity of ciliate species is largely unaffected by loss of habitat. One can readily calculate (e.g. Wilson, 1992) that in the larger metazoans, with a typical z- value of 0.3, a reduction in habitat area (e.g. of rain- forest) to one tenth of its original size, will eventually lead to loss of one half of the original number of species. For ciliates (z = 0.043), the same reduction in area would lead to a 10% reduction in species number. But even this level of threatened extinction is probably unrealistically severe, as a specific ciliate habitat is unlikely to be lost simultaneously from all places in the biosphere where it exists (and the same ciliate species probably live in 'rainforests' that are geographically isolated from each other). Moreover, at a local level, habitat destruction is per- haps only rarely so thorough that it reduces the abundance of any ciliate species-population to such an extent that stochastic extinction becomes likely. If our extrapolation was based on only one dataset, the closeness of the global estimate to that obtained by taxonomic analysis might be consid- ered fortuitous. The fact that the two independent data sets can each be extrapolated to show the same general species-area relation and that these extrapolations converge with the additional inde- pendent estimate of taxonomic analysis indicates that our conclusions are firm: free-living ciliate species are ubiquitous, many have cosmopolitan distributions and their global species richness is rel- atively low. Methods Marine data: The localities, sampling techniques and enumeration methods are described in Fenchel (1969). Sampling was concentrated within three main areas, and at water depths down to 22 m: in the 0resund, the Isefjord area, and in the Baltic south of Stockholm. The largest data set is from Helsing0r Beach (Denmark). Freshwater data: The largest dataset we used was derived from a study of the benthos of a lake (Esthwaite Water) in the UK. These data were ob- tained from monthly sampling in the period October 1978 to November 1981. A total of 228 Jenkin sedi- ment cores were collected. The data from Airthrey Loch in Scotland (UK) were obtained from examina- tion of 92 sediment cores taken with approximately monthly sampling at three sites in the period Jan- uary 1975 to December 1976. The remainder of the data were obtained from 18 excursions to sample five shallow freshwater streams on the Jos Plateau record for the remaining species (Oxytricha salmas- traY is from tropical Africa (Dragesco and Dragesco- Kernt3is, 1986). This directed search for 'endemics' in a place where we might have had a realistic chance of finding some, has so far failed to reveal any. Species-area relations, and extinctions Two important features of the species-richness of free-living ciliates become clear, and both are a con- sequence of their small size. First, in comparison with macroscopic animals and plants, individuals and species are both very densely packed in nature. A square metre of freshwater benthos will typically contain 2x107 ciliates represented by 234 species. The equivalent figures for the marine interstitial are 107 ciliates and 212 species. How do so many species manage to live in a small area? The answer is easily explained in terms of 'fractal geometry': that the world is equally complex at all scales, so for example 1cm2 of sediment could be as complex a habitat for protozoa as a beech tree in mid-summer is for insects. The reality of this phenomenon will of course be obvious to anyone who has used a micro- scope to examine a small sediment aggregate and found attached peritrich ciliates, Chilodonella and Aspidisca crawling and browsing over the surface, Spirostomum and various small scuticociliates filter feeding in the pore volume, and the neck of an em- bedded Lacrymaria periodically emerging to grab algae and other microbial food items. The second important feature is the low rate of species addition for increasing area. The best known general equation for the relation is S = CN, where S is number of species, A is area, and C and z are constants that vary from one group of organisms to another (MacArthur and Wilson 1967). In most studies where the relationship has been fitted (Le. the macroscopic flora and fauna of islands), z takes a value in the range 0.2 to 0.35. The value is usually smaller (0.12-0.17) when the areas are located within continents (reflecting enhanced migration be- tween areas); and birds (easily dispersed) have lower values than land snails. The average slope of the extrapolation for ciliates in Figure 3 (z = 0.043) falls well below either of these ranges and is consis- tent with the high rates of dispersal assumed for cili- ates. In this connection it is interesting that Dodson (1991, 1992) also reports a low value (z = 0.05) for another group of relatively small and easily dis- persed animals - the crustacean zooplankton of Eu- ropean and North American lakes. He too, ascribes the low value to high rates of immigration from neighbouring areas. Protozoan Diversity 35 One important implication of the low slope for the ciliate species-area relationship is that the global di- versity of ciliate species is largely unaffected by loss of habitat. One can readily calculate (e.g. Wilson, 1992) that in the larger metazoans, with a typical z- value of 0.3, a reduction in habitat area (e.g. of rain- forest) to one tenth of its original size, will eventually lead to loss of one half of the original number of species. For ciliates (z = 0.043), the same reduction in area would lead to a 10% reduction in species number. But even this level of threatened extinction is probably unrealistically severe, as a specific ciliate habitat is unlikely to be lost simultaneously from all places in the biosphere where it exists (and the same ciliate species probably live in 'rainforests' that are geographically isolated from each other). Moreover, at a local level, habitat destruction is per- haps only rarely so thorough that it reduces the abundance of any ciliate species-population to such an extent that stochastic extinction becomes likely. If our extrapolation was based on only one dataset, the closeness of the global estimate to that obtained by taxonomic analysis might be consid- ered fortuitous. The fact that the two independent data sets can each be extrapolated to show the same general species-area relation and that these extrapolations converge with the additional inde- pendent estimate of taxonomic analysis indicates that our conclusions are firm: free-living ciliate species are ubiquitous, many have cosmopolitan distributions and their global species richness is rel- atively low. Methods Marine data: The localities, sampling techniques and enumeration methods are described in Fenchel (1969). Sampling was concentrated within three main areas, and at water depths down to 22 m: in the 0resund, the Isefjord area, and in the Baltic south of Stockholm. The largest data set is from Helsing0r Beach (Denmark). Freshwater data: The largest dataset we used was derived from a study of the benthos of a lake (Esthwaite Water) in the UK. These data were ob- tained from monthly sampling in the period October 1978 to November 1981. A total of 228 Jenkin sedi- ment cores were collected. The data from Airthrey Loch in Scotland (UK) were obtained from examina- tion of 92 sediment cores taken with approximately monthly sampling at three sites in the period Jan- uary 1975 to December 1976. The remainder of the data were obtained from 18 excursions to sample five shallow freshwater streams on the Jos Plateau
  • 8. 36 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel in Nigeria, in the period December 1977 to May 1978. The enumeration methods used are described in Finlay and Guhl (1992). Further information relat- ing to the Airthrey and Esthwaite datasets appears in Finlay (1980, 1982 respectively). Taxonomic analysis: The method used in analysing all ciliate species descriptions published in the period 1758 to 1996, was published in Finlay et al. (1996b). The dataset established therein has been further analysed, with allocation of all free-liv- ing ciliate species to one of two categories: marine, and non-marine. Some ciliates (e.g. Cyclidium glaucoma) live in the sea and in fresh water, so numbers of these have been divided equally be- tween the marine and non-marine categories. The marine category was then further divided - into those species that are typically interstitial, and those that are not (e.g. tintinnids and other plank- tonic ciliates). This procedure is not easily applied to the freshwater ciliates, of which few can be clas- sified as truly interstitial species. The interstitial habitat is much rarer in the typically finely-grained freshwater sediments, and many freshwater ciliates perform seasonal benthic-planktonic migrations in response to the development of deep-water anoxia ·(Finlay 1981). But many freshwater ciliates are ap- parently well-adapted for a permanently planktonic lifestyle (e.g. many oligotrichs), and we finally allo- cated species to the freshwater benthos category if they were not obviously planktonic, and if the weight of evidence (our personal experience com- bined with that in the published literature) indicated that the benthos provided their 'preferred' habitat. It may be noted that some (perhaps many) 'soil cili- ates' also make a living in fresh waters (Foissner 1987); especially in riverine and littoral sediments. These species are included in our 'freshwater ben- thos' total in Table 1. The species concept used throughout is the con- cept of 'morphospecies' as described in Finlay et al. (1996b). Data handling: All data handling and statistical processes were performed using Microsoft EXCEL (5.0). Acknowledgements This work was supported financially by the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (NERC, United King- dom), The British Council (newIMAGES), and the Danish Natural Science Research Council. The in- terim results from Australia are the product of an on- going collaboration with Prof. PA Tyler, Deakin Uni- versity, Australia. References Agatha 5, Spindler M, Wilbert N (1993) Ciliated proto- zoa (Ciliophora) from Arctic sea ice. Acta Protozool 32: 261-268 Bary BM (1950) Studies on the freshwater ciliates of New Zealand. Part II. An annotated list of species from the neighbourhood of Wellington. Proc Roy Soc N.Z. 78:311-323 Bowers NJ, Pratt JR (1995) Estimation of genetic vari- ation among soil ciliates of Colpoda inflata (Stokes) (Protozoa: Ciliophora) using the polymerase chain reac- tion and restriction fragment length polymorphism anal- ysis. Arch Protistenkd 145: 29-36 Corliss JO (1974) Time for evolutionary biologists to take more interest in phylogenetics? Taxon 23: 497-522 Corliss JO, Daggett P-M (1983) 'Paramecium aurelia' and 'Tetrahymena pyriformis'; current status of the tax- onomy and nomenclature of these popularly known and widely used ciliates. Protistologica 19: 307-322 Dodson 5 (1991) Species richness of crustacean zoo- plankton in European lakes of different sizes. Verh Inter- nat Verein theor ang Limnol 24: 1223-1229 Dodson 5 (1992) Predicting crustacean zooplankton species richness. Limnol Oceanogr 37: 848-856 Dragesco J, Dragesco-Kerneis A (1986) Cilies Libres de l'Afrique Intertropicale. [Collection Faune Tropicale no. 26], ORSTOM, Paris Ekebom J, Patterson OJ, Vors N (1996) Heterotrophic flagellates from coral reef sediments (Great Barrier Reef, Australia). Arch Protistenkd 146: 251-272 Esteban G, Finlay BJ, Embley TM (1993) New species double the diversity of anaerobic ciliates in a Spanish lake. FEMS Microbiol Lett 109: 93-100 Fenchel T (1969) The ecology of marine microbenthos IV. Structure and function of the benthic ecosystem, its chemical and physical factors and the microfauna com- munities with special reference to the ciliated protozoa. Ophelia 6: 1-182 Fenchel T (1993) There are more small than large species? Oikos 68: 375-378 Fenchel T, Esteban GF, Finlay BJ (1997) Local versus global diversity of microorganisms: cryptic diversity of ciliated protozoa. Oikos 80: 220-225 Finlay BJ (1980) Temporal and vertical distribution of ciliophoran communities in the benthos of a small eu- trophic loch with particular reference to the redox pro- file. Freshwat Bioi 10: 15-34 Finlay BJ (1981) Oxygen availability and seasonal mi- grations of ciliated protozoa in a freshwater lake. J Gen Microbiol123: 173-178 Finlay BJ (1982) Effects of seasonal anoxia on the com- munity of benthic ciliated protozoa in a productive lake. Arch Protistenkd 125: 215-222 36 B. J. Finlay, G. F. Esteban, and T. Fenchel in Nigeria, in the period December 1977 to May 1978. The enumeration methods used are described in Finlay and Guhl (1992). Further information relat- ing to the Airthrey and Esthwaite datasets appears in Finlay (1980, 1982 respectively). Taxonomic analysis: The method used in analysing all ciliate species descriptions published in the period 1758 to 1996, was published in Finlay et al. (1996b). The dataset established therein has been further analysed, with allocation of all free-liv- ing ciliate species to one of two categories: marine, and non-marine. Some ciliates (e.g. Cyclidium glaucoma) live in the sea and in fresh water, so numbers of these have been divided equally be- tween the marine and non-marine categories. The marine category was then further divided - into those species that are typically interstitial, and those that are not (e.g. tintinnids and other plank- tonic ciliates). This procedure is not easily applied to the freshwater ciliates, of which few can be clas- sified as truly interstitial species. The interstitial habitat is much rarer in the typically finely-grained freshwater sediments, and many freshwater ciliates perform seasonal benthic-planktonic migrations in response to the development of deep-water anoxia ·(Finlay 1981). But many freshwater ciliates are ap- parently well-adapted for a permanently planktonic lifestyle (e.g. many oligotrichs), and we finally allo- cated species to the freshwater benthos category if they were not obviously planktonic, and if the weight of evidence (our personal experience com- bined with that in the published literature) indicated that the benthos provided their 'preferred' habitat. It may be noted that some (perhaps many) 'soil cili- ates' also make a living in fresh waters (Foissner 1987); especially in riverine and littoral sediments. These species are included in our 'freshwater ben- thos' total in Table 1. The species concept used throughout is the con- cept of 'morphospecies' as described in Finlay et al. (1996b). Data handling: All data handling and statistical processes were performed using Microsoft EXCEL (5.0). Acknowledgements This work was supported financially by the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (NERC, United King- dom), The British Council (newIMAGES), and the Danish Natural Science Research Council. The in- terim results from Australia are the product of an on- going collaboration with Prof. PA Tyler, Deakin Uni- versity, Australia. References Agatha 5, Spindler M, Wilbert N (1993) Ciliated proto- zoa (Ciliophora) from Arctic sea ice. Acta Protozool 32: 261-268 Bary BM (1950) Studies on the freshwater ciliates of New Zealand. Part II. An annotated list of species from the neighbourhood of Wellington. Proc Roy Soc N.Z. 78:311-323 Bowers NJ, Pratt JR (1995) Estimation of genetic vari- ation among soil ciliates of Colpoda inflata (Stokes) (Protozoa: Ciliophora) using the polymerase chain reac- tion and restriction fragment length polymorphism anal- ysis. Arch Protistenkd 145: 29-36 Corliss JO (1974) Time for evolutionary biologists to take more interest in phylogenetics? Taxon 23: 497-522 Corliss JO, Daggett P-M (1983) 'Paramecium aurelia' and 'Tetrahymena pyriformis'; current status of the tax- onomy and nomenclature of these popularly known and widely used ciliates. Protistologica 19: 307-322 Dodson 5 (1991) Species richness of crustacean zoo- plankton in European lakes of different sizes. Verh Inter- nat Verein theor ang Limnol 24: 1223-1229 Dodson 5 (1992) Predicting crustacean zooplankton species richness. Limnol Oceanogr 37: 848-856 Dragesco J, Dragesco-Kerneis A (1986) Cilies Libres de l'Afrique Intertropicale. [Collection Faune Tropicale no. 26], ORSTOM, Paris Ekebom J, Patterson OJ, Vors N (1996) Heterotrophic flagellates from coral reef sediments (Great Barrier Reef, Australia). Arch Protistenkd 146: 251-272 Esteban G, Finlay BJ, Embley TM (1993) New species double the diversity of anaerobic ciliates in a Spanish lake. FEMS Microbiol Lett 109: 93-100 Fenchel T (1969) The ecology of marine microbenthos IV. Structure and function of the benthic ecosystem, its chemical and physical factors and the microfauna com- munities with special reference to the ciliated protozoa. Ophelia 6: 1-182 Fenchel T (1993) There are more small than large species? Oikos 68: 375-378 Fenchel T, Esteban GF, Finlay BJ (1997) Local versus global diversity of microorganisms: cryptic diversity of ciliated protozoa. Oikos 80: 220-225 Finlay BJ (1980) Temporal and vertical distribution of ciliophoran communities in the benthos of a small eu- trophic loch with particular reference to the redox pro- file. Freshwat Bioi 10: 15-34 Finlay BJ (1981) Oxygen availability and seasonal mi- grations of ciliated protozoa in a freshwater lake. J Gen Microbiol123: 173-178 Finlay BJ (1982) Effects of seasonal anoxia on the com- munity of benthic ciliated protozoa in a productive lake. Arch Protistenkd 125: 215-222
  • 9. Finlay BJ (1997). The diversity and ecological role of protozoa in fresh waters. In Sutcliffe DW, Jones JG (eds) The Microbiological Quality of Water. FBAIISWA, pp 108-125 Finlay BJ, Berninger U-G, Clarke KJ, Cowling AJ, Hindle RM, Rogerson A (1988) On the abundance and distribution of protozoa and their food in a productive freshwater pond. Europ J Protistol23: 205-217 Finlay BJ, Esteban GF, Fenchel T (1996a) Global di- versity and body size. Nature 383:132-133 Finlay BJ, Corliss JO, Esteban GF, Fenchel T (1996b) Biodiversity at the microbial level: the number of free- living ciliates in the biosphere. Quart Rev Bioi 71: 221-237 Finlay BJ, Maberly SC, Esteban GF (1996c) Spectacu- lar abundance of ciliates in anoxic pond water: contri- bution of symbiont photosynthesis to host respiratory oxygen requirements. FEMS Microbiol Ecol 20: 229-235 Finlay BJ, Guhl BE (1992) Benthic sampling - fresh- water. Pages In Lee JJ, Soldo AT (eds) Protocols in Pro- tozology. Society of Protozoologists, Lawrence, Kansas, pp B-2.1- 5 Foissner W (1987) Soil protozoa: fundamental prob- lems, ecological significance, adaptations in ciliates and testaceans, bioindicators, and guide to the litera- ture. Prog Protistol 2: 69-212. Foissner W (1994) Bryometopus hawaiiensis sp. n., a new colpodid ciliate from a terrestrial biotope of the Hawaiian Archipelago. Annals Naturhist Mus Wien 96B: 19-27 Foissner W (1997) Global soil ciliate (Protozoa, Cilio- phora) diversity: a probability-based approach using large sample collectives from Africa, Australia, and Antarctica. Biodiv Conserv (In press) Gaston K J (1992) Regional numbers of insect and plant species. Funct Ecol6: 243-247 Holmberg 0, Pejler B (1972) On the terrestrial micro- fauna of Surtsey during the summer 1970. Surtsey Res Progr Rep 6: 69-72 Kristiansen J (1996) Dispersal of freshwater algae - a review. Hydrobiologia 336: 151-157 Lackey JB (1938) A study of some ecologic factors af- fecting the distribution of protozoa. Ecol Monogr 8: 503-527 Larsen J, Patterson OJ (1990) Some flagellates (Pro- tista) from tropical marine sediments. J Nat Hist 24: 801-937 MacArthur RH, Wilson EO (1967) The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton University Press, Princeton Maguire B (1963) The passive dispersal of small aquatic organisms and their colonization of isolated bodies of water. Ecol Monogr33: 161-185 Maguire B, Belk 0 (1967) Paramecium transport by land snails. J Protozool 14: 445-447 Protozoan Diversity 37 May RM (1988) How many species are there on Earth? Science 241: 1441-1449 May RM (1990) How many species? Phil Trans RS Lond 330: 293-304 Nanney OL, McCoy JW (1976) Characterization of the species of the Tetrahymena pyriformis complex. Trans Amer Microsc Soc 95: 664-682 Nyberg 0 (1988) The species concept and breeding systems. In G6rtz HD (ed) Paramecium. Springer-Ver- lag, Berlin, pp 41-58 Ogden CG, Hedley RH (1980) An Atlas of Freshwater Testate Amoebae. British Museum/Oxford University Press, Oxford Olmo JL, Tellez C (1996). An European population of Bryometopus hawaiiensis Foissner, 1994 (Protozoa: Cil- iophora). Acta Protozool 35: 317-320 Parsons WM, Schlichting HE, Stewart KW (1966) In- flight transport of algae and protozoa by selected Odonata. Trans Amer Microsc Soc 85: 520-527 Patterson OJ, Simpson AGB (1996) Heterotrophic flagellates from coastal marine and hypersaline sedi- ments in Western Australia. Europ J Protistol 32: 423-448 Petz W, Song W, Wilbert N (1995) Taxonomy and ecol- ogy of the ciliate fauna (Protozoa Ciliophora) in the en- dopagial and pelagial of the Weddell Sea Antarctica. Stapfia 40: 223pp. Preston FW (1948) The commonness and rarity of species. Ecology 29: 254-283 Sandon H (1927) The Composition and Distribution of the Protozoan Fauna of the Soil. Oliver and Boyd, Edin- burgh. Schlichting HE, Sides SL (1969) The passive transport of aquatic microorganisms by selected Hemiptera. J EcoI57:759-764 Scourfield OJ (1944) The nannoplankton of bomb- crater pools in Epping Forest. Essex Natural 27: 231-241 Smith HG (1978) The distribution and ecology of terres- trial protozoa of sub-Antarctic and maritime Antarctic islands. Scient Reps Brit Antarc Surv No 95, BAS/NERC, Cambridge Stout JO (1956) Reaction of ciliates to environmental factors. Ecology 37: 178-191 Tyler PA (1996) Endemism in freshwater algae. Hydro- biologia 336: 127-135 UNEP (1995) Global Biodiversity Assessment. Hey- wood VH (exec ed) Cambridge University Press, Cam- bridge Wilbert N, Kahan 0 (1981) Ciliates of Solar Lake on the Red Sea shore. Arch Protistenkd 124: 70-95 Wilson EO (1992) The diversity of life. Penguin, London Zink RM (1996) Bird species diversity. Nature 381: 566 Finlay BJ (1997). The diversity and ecological role of protozoa in fresh waters. In Sutcliffe DW, Jones JG (eds) The Microbiological Quality of Water. FBAIISWA, pp 108-125 Finlay BJ, Berninger U-G, Clarke KJ, Cowling AJ, Hindle RM, Rogerson A (1988) On the abundance and distribution of protozoa and their food in a productive freshwater pond. Europ J Protistol23: 205-217 Finlay BJ, Esteban GF, Fenchel T (1996a) Global di- versity and body size. Nature 383:132-133 Finlay BJ, Corliss JO, Esteban GF, Fenchel T (1996b) Biodiversity at the microbial level: the number of free- living ciliates in the biosphere. Quart Rev Bioi 71: 221-237 Finlay BJ, Maberly SC, Esteban GF (1996c) Spectacu- lar abundance of ciliates in anoxic pond water: contri- bution of symbiont photosynthesis to host respiratory oxygen requirements. FEMS Microbiol Ecol 20: 229-235 Finlay BJ, Guhl BE (1992) Benthic sampling - fresh- water. Pages In Lee JJ, Soldo AT (eds) Protocols in Pro- tozology. Society of Protozoologists, Lawrence, Kansas, pp B-2.1- 5 Foissner W (1987) Soil protozoa: fundamental prob- lems, ecological significance, adaptations in ciliates and testaceans, bioindicators, and guide to the litera- ture. Prog Protistol 2: 69-212. Foissner W (1994) Bryometopus hawaiiensis sp. n., a new colpodid ciliate from a terrestrial biotope of the Hawaiian Archipelago. Annals Naturhist Mus Wien 96B: 19-27 Foissner W (1997) Global soil ciliate (Protozoa, Cilio- phora) diversity: a probability-based approach using large sample collectives from Africa, Australia, and Antarctica. Biodiv Conserv (In press) Gaston K J (1992) Regional numbers of insect and plant species. Funct Ecol6: 243-247 Holmberg 0, Pejler B (1972) On the terrestrial micro- fauna of Surtsey during the summer 1970. Surtsey Res Progr Rep 6: 69-72 Kristiansen J (1996) Dispersal of freshwater algae - a review. Hydrobiologia 336: 151-157 Lackey JB (1938) A study of some ecologic factors af- fecting the distribution of protozoa. Ecol Monogr 8: 503-527 Larsen J, Patterson OJ (1990) Some flagellates (Pro- tista) from tropical marine sediments. J Nat Hist 24: 801-937 MacArthur RH, Wilson EO (1967) The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton University Press, Princeton Maguire B (1963) The passive dispersal of small aquatic organisms and their colonization of isolated bodies of water. Ecol Monogr33: 161-185 Maguire B, Belk 0 (1967) Paramecium transport by land snails. J Protozool 14: 445-447 Protozoan Diversity 37 May RM (1988) How many species are there on Earth? Science 241: 1441-1449 May RM (1990) How many species? Phil Trans RS Lond 330: 293-304 Nanney OL, McCoy JW (1976) Characterization of the species of the Tetrahymena pyriformis complex. Trans Amer Microsc Soc 95: 664-682 Nyberg 0 (1988) The species concept and breeding systems. In G6rtz HD (ed) Paramecium. Springer-Ver- lag, Berlin, pp 41-58 Ogden CG, Hedley RH (1980) An Atlas of Freshwater Testate Amoebae. British Museum/Oxford University Press, Oxford Olmo JL, Tellez C (1996). An European population of Bryometopus hawaiiensis Foissner, 1994 (Protozoa: Cil- iophora). Acta Protozool 35: 317-320 Parsons WM, Schlichting HE, Stewart KW (1966) In- flight transport of algae and protozoa by selected Odonata. Trans Amer Microsc Soc 85: 520-527 Patterson OJ, Simpson AGB (1996) Heterotrophic flagellates from coastal marine and hypersaline sedi- ments in Western Australia. Europ J Protistol 32: 423-448 Petz W, Song W, Wilbert N (1995) Taxonomy and ecol- ogy of the ciliate fauna (Protozoa Ciliophora) in the en- dopagial and pelagial of the Weddell Sea Antarctica. Stapfia 40: 223pp. Preston FW (1948) The commonness and rarity of species. Ecology 29: 254-283 Sandon H (1927) The Composition and Distribution of the Protozoan Fauna of the Soil. Oliver and Boyd, Edin- burgh. Schlichting HE, Sides SL (1969) The passive transport of aquatic microorganisms by selected Hemiptera. J EcoI57:759-764 Scourfield OJ (1944) The nannoplankton of bomb- crater pools in Epping Forest. Essex Natural 27: 231-241 Smith HG (1978) The distribution and ecology of terres- trial protozoa of sub-Antarctic and maritime Antarctic islands. Scient Reps Brit Antarc Surv No 95, BAS/NERC, Cambridge Stout JO (1956) Reaction of ciliates to environmental factors. Ecology 37: 178-191 Tyler PA (1996) Endemism in freshwater algae. Hydro- biologia 336: 127-135 UNEP (1995) Global Biodiversity Assessment. Hey- wood VH (exec ed) Cambridge University Press, Cam- bridge Wilbert N, Kahan 0 (1981) Ciliates of Solar Lake on the Red Sea shore. Arch Protistenkd 124: 70-95 Wilson EO (1992) The diversity of life. Penguin, London Zink RM (1996) Bird species diversity. Nature 381: 566