I'll give a characterization of the principle "every complete atomless algebra has an infinite antichain."
 Conventions. We take "algebra" to mean an atomless Boolean algebra (and similarly for variations like "subalgebra"). An $\omega$-tree is a poset $(T, <)$ with a maximum for which each up-set $t \uparrow$ is a chain and $\{|t \uparrow |: t \in T\}=\omega.$ For $R \subset X \times Y,$ let $R_x$ and $R^y$ denote vertical and horizontal sections, respectively, and $\pi_i$ is the projection to coordinate $i.$
 Adapting the terminology of Blackadar-Farah-Karagila, a set $A$ is Cohen infinite set if $[A]^{<\omega}$ is Dedekind infinite.
 TFAE:
  - Every algebra has an infinite chain or antichain.
  - Every algebra is Dedekind infinite (Form 247).
  - Every algebra has a countably infinite chain.
  - Every algebra has a countably infinite antichain.
  - Any of the above restricted to complete algebras.
  - Every complete algebra has a countable subalgebra.
  - Every infinite set is Cohen infinite and Form 216 (every $\omega$-tree has an infinite chain or antichain) holds.
  
 Proof. We let (n') denote the restriction of principle (n) to complete algebras, e.g. (2') is "every complete algebra is Dedekind infinite."
 (2) $\, \leftrightarrow$ (3) $\, \leftrightarrow$ (4) $\, \rightarrow$ (1)
 $\downarrow \: \qquad \downarrow \: \qquad \downarrow \: \qquad \downarrow$
 (2') $\leftrightarrow$ (3') $\leftrightarrow$ (4') $\rightarrow$ (1')
 This follows from verifying for a fixed algebra $B$ the implications "$B$ has a countably infinite antichain" $\leftrightarrow$ "$B$ has a countable infinite chain" $\leftrightarrow$ "$B$ is Dedekind infinite $\rightarrow$ "$B$ has an infinite antichain."
 (6) $\leftrightarrow$ (4')
 $\rightarrow$ is clear. For $\leftarrow,$ let $\langle x_n \rangle$ be an antichain in a complete algebra $B.$ The points of the form $y_{a,b}:=\bigvee_{k<\omega} x_{a+bk}$ generate a countable subalgebra.
 (1') $\rightarrow$ (7)
 If $A$ is an infinite Cohen finite set, a generalization of the sunflower argument in Andreas' answer shows that every point in $\mathrm{Add}(A, 1)$ has finite support, and its chains and antichains are finite.
 Now we show (1') implies Form 216. Suppose $(T, <)$ is an $\omega$-tree of height $\omega$ with no infinite chain or antichain. Pruning $T$ yields a subtree $(T', <)$ of height $\omega$ which splits below every node. Let $B=\mathrm{RO}(T')$ i.e. the complete algebra which forces a generic branch $b$ through $T'.$
 Suppose $X \subset B$ is an infinite antichain. For $x \in X,$ let $$x'=\{y \in T': \forall z \in T' (|y \uparrow^T| \le |z \uparrow^T|)\}.$$ Then $\{x': x \in X\}$ is an infinite antichain in $T,$ contradiction.
 Suppose $C \subset B$ is an infinite chain, which we may assume to be closed under inf and sup of subsets. Define a map $f: T \rightarrow C$ by $f(y)=\sup \{x \in C: y <^B x\}.$ Then $C':=f"(T)$ is countable dense subset of $(C, <^B),$ so $C'$ is a countably infinite chain. Then $B$ has a countably infinite antichain, contradicting the above.
 (7) $\rightarrow$ (2)
 Assume (7). Let $B$ be an algebra. Let $\langle s_n : n<\omega \rangle$ be a sequence of disjoint nonempty finite subsets of $B \setminus \{0, 1\}.$ Let $t_n$ be the set of minimal nonzero Boolean combinations of points in $\bigcup_{k<n} s_k.$ Let $$T=\bigcup_{n<\omega} (\{n\} \times t_n) \subset \omega^* \times B$$ and equip $T$ with the lexicographical order. Then $T$ is an $\omega$-tree and $\langle T_n \rangle$ is a sequence of finite partitions of $B$ ordered by refinement.
 Let $T'=\{(n, u) \in T: n=\min(T^u) \vee |T^u|<\aleph_0\}.$ Then $T'$ is an $\omega$-tree and thus has an infinite chain or antichain.
 If $T'$ has an infinite chain $C,$ then $\pi_1"(C)$ is a countably infinite chain. Suppose $T'$ has an infinite antichain $X.$ Let $\langle k_n \rangle$ enumerate the $k$ such that $X \cap T'_k \neq \emptyset.$ Then $n \mapsto \bigvee (A \cap T'_{k_n})$ is an injection from $\omega$ into $B. \square$
 Note that (2) shows that this principle follows from Form 9 (every infinite set is Dedekind infinite). However it is incomparable to a slightly weaker principle:
 Theorem. Form 247 is incomparable to Form 10 (a countable union of finite sets is countable) over ZF.
 Proof. In the Cohen model, there is an infinite Dedekind finite set of reals, which is necessarily Cohen finite. Thus form 247 fails while Form 10 holds in this model.
 In Harry West's permutation model, Form 216 holds, Form 10 fails, and every infinite set is Cohen finite (immediate from Multiple Choice holding in this model, analogously to [1]). The assertions that Form 10 fails and a Dedekind finite set cannot support an atomless algebra are injectively bounded, so their conjunction transfers to ZF. $\square$
 Theorem. The assertion that every algebra has a countable subalgebra is strictly stronger than Form 247. It follows from DC, but it does not follow from $\mathrm{AC}_{\omega} + \mathrm{BPI}.$
 Proof. Howard/Rubin Model I ($\mathcal{N}38$ in Consequences of the Axiom of Choice, introduced in [3]) satisfies $\mathrm{ZFA} + \mathrm{AC}_{\omega} + \mathrm{BPI}$ and has a dense linear order $(A, <)$ with no descending sequence. Let $U$ be the set of finite unions of intervals in $A.$ Then $B=(U/[A]^{<\omega}, \subset)$ is an algebra.
 Suppose $S$ is a countable subalgebra. Let $\langle e_n \rangle$ enumerate the end points of all nontrivial intervals $I$ such that for some $s \in S,$ $I$ is a maximal subinterval almost contained in $s.$ Then $(\langle e_n \rangle, <)$ is a countable well-order, and any $s \in S$ for which $\mathrm{ot}(\{e_n: [e_n, e_{n+1}] \subset^* s\})$ is minimized is an atom, contradiction.
 These facts all transfer to ZF by Pincus' transfer theorem for BPI ([2]). $\square$
 [1] Lévy, A., Axioms of multiple choice, Fundam. Math. 50, 475-483 (1962). ZBL0134.24805. Link
 [2] Pincus, David, Adding dependent choice, Ann. Math. Logic 11, 105-145 (1977). ZBL0365.02052.
 [3] Howard, P. and J. Rubin., The Boolean Prime Ideal Theorem Plus Countable Choice Do Not Imply Dependent Choice. Math. Log. Q. 42 (1996): 410-420.
 [4] Karagila, A. and Schlicht, P. How to have more things by forgetting how to count them. Proc. R. Soc. A476: 20190782. arXiv link