Shape matters: the relationship between cell geometry and diversity in
phytoplankton
Abstract
Organisms’ size and shape profoundly influence their ecophysiological
performance and evolutionary fitness, suggesting a link between
morphology and diversity. We analyse global datasets of unicellular
phytoplankton, major group of photosynthetic microbes with an astounding
diversity of cell sizes and shapes, and explore the distribution of
taxonomic diversity across different cell shapes and sizes. We find that
cells of intermediate volume have the greatest shape variation, from
oblate to extremely elongated forms, while small and large cells are
mostly compact (e.g., spherical or cubic). Taxonomic diversity varies
across cell elongation and cell volume, with both traits explaining up
to 92% of its variance. It decays exponentially with cell elongation
and displays a log-normal dependence on cell volume, peaking for
compact, intermediate-volume cells. Our findings point to the presence
of different selective pressures and constraints on the geometry of
phytoplankton cells and, thus, improve our understanding of the
evolutionary rules of life.