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    Conventional sampling methods severely underestimate phytoplankton species richness

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    10 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, supplementary data http://plankt.oxfordjournals.org/content/36/2/334/suppl/DC1Conventional methods for the estimation of marine phytoplankton diversity include the collection of a small volume of seawater which is analysed under the microscope. We sampled natural communities and also synthetic communities generated under a neutral community model configuration and demonstrate that traditional sampling methods underestimate the species richness of marine phytoplankton communities. In our model, a synthetic community represents an ensemble of individuals enclosed in a parcel of seawater wherein the dynamics of each population is controlled by demographic stochasticity and dispersal. By sampling these synthetic communities, we found that roughly 20-45% of the species is missed by conventional, small volume samples. Consistent with the simulations, field data showed that the number of species increases with sampling effort by up to ∼1.5-fold, revealing that these microbial communities might be more diverse than previously estimated. We suggest that conventional sampling methods have limited our ability to delineate the patterns of marine phytoplankton diversity and identify the underlying mechanisms. Improved sampling methods are proposed to obtain more accurate estimates of marine phytoplankton diversity. © The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reservedThis work was supported by the Spanish Ministerio de Economı´a y Competitividad (MINECO), through projects DISTRAL (CTM2011-25035) and PERSEO (CTM2008-03699). T. R.-R. acknowledges the receipt of a FPI predoctoral fellowship from MINECOPeer Reviewe
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