“…Heterotrophic dinoflagellates are an impol tant component of the mdrine miciozooplankton, often approaching 01 exceeding the abundance of planktonic ciliates (Burkill et a1 1993, Verity et a1 1993 and they have been shoxvn to be important grazels of diatoms (Hansen 1991, Tiselius & Kuylenstierna 1996 Due to morphological constraints ( 2 flagella compared to the numerous cilla of ciliates), heterotrophic dinoflagellates do not feed by filtering small particles from the water as some ciliates do (Fenchel 1986), instead they capture lndividual phytoplankton cells, sometimes nearly as large or larger than themselves, and either 'E-mail buskeyQutmsi.zo.utexas edu engulf the entire cell 01 t~ansfer body fluids of the captured cell into themselves by way of a palllum 01 a pedunclc (Gaines & Elbrachter 1987) Protopend~n~um pellucldum, the subject of this study, is a pallium feeder, and captures and digests single phytoplankton cells (or chains of cells) externally (Jacobson & Andelson 1986) Since larger phytoplankton cells are often less abundant than smaller-sized cells, heterotrophic dinoflagellates may not rely on random encounter with sultable food cells and therefore need some sensory modality to help them locate lndividual food particles After passing neai a potential food item, the P~o t o p e n d~n~u m spp circles around the food several times, usually bvithout contacting the cell (Jacobson & Anderson 1986) Thls behavior suggests that chemoreception is used to recognize and locate a potential food item Sev-era1 previous studies have demonstrated the role of chemoreception in the feeding behavior of heterotroph~c dinoflagellates (Hauser et al 1975, Spero 1985 and other protozoans (Levandowsky et al 1984, Verity 1988. Pallium feeding dinoflagellates of the genus Protoperidlnium have been previously shown to feed mainly on diatoms and dinoflagellates (Jacobson & Anderson 1986, Hansen 1991, Buskey et al 1994, Jeong & Latz 1994.…”