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1.
Lithophyllum yessoense Foslie is a markedly dominant subtidal, crustose coralline alga in south–western Hokkaido, Japan. In this study, the effects of irradiance, water temperature and nutrients (nitrate and phosphate) on the growth of sporelings of the alga were examined. The relative growth rate (RGR) was saturated at 17.6% d?1 at a high irradiance (240 umol photon m2s?1). Even at a low irradiance (10.7–49.9 umol photon m?2s?1), RGR was 7.1–12.7% d?1 The survival rate of sporelings was greater than 80% at irradiance above 10.7 μmol photon m?2s?1 throughout the culture period. The growth of L. yessoense sporelings was promoted at 15°C and 20°C, but inhibited at 5°C. The half‐saturation constants (Ks) for growth were about 0.5 umol L?1 and 0.14 umol L?1 for nitrate and phosphate, respectively. Saturated nitrate and phosphate concentrations for the growth were about 4.0 μmol L?1 and 0.4 μmol L?1, respectively, suggesting that L. yessoense is adaptable to a relatively high water temperature, a wide range of irradiance, and low ambient nitrate and phosphate concentrations. The results provide a possible explanation of why L. yessoense is dominant in the environments of south‐western Hokkaido.  相似文献   

2.
The metabolic fate of photosynthetically-fixed CO2 was determined by labeling samples of Merismopedia tenuissima Lemmerman for 30 min with NaH14CO3 and analyzing its incorporation into low molecular weight compounds, polysaccharide and protein. In N- and P-sufficient cultures, relative incorporation into protein increased as the irradiance used during the labeling period was decreased to 20 μE · m-2 s-1. This pattern was found for cells grown at irradiances of either 20 or 180 μE · m-2· s-1, although incorporation into protein was greater in cultures grown at the higher irradiance. In N-limited continuous cultures, relative incorporation into protein was low, independent of growth rate, and the same for samples tested at 20 or 180 μE · m-2· s-1 irradiance. In contrast, 14C incorporation into protein by P-limited cultures increased as growth rate increased, and at relative growth rates greater than 0.25, the incorporation was greater at 20 than at 180 μE · m-2· s-1. However, the total RNA content and maximum photosynthetic rate of the cultures was the same at all growth rates tested. The interaction between nutrient concentration and light intensity was studied by growing-limited continuous cultures at the same dilution rate, but different irradiances. Relative incorporation into protein was highest in cultures grown at 20 μE · m-2· s-1, in which the relative growth rate was 0.4. These results suggest that photosynthetic carbon metabolism may respond to relative growth rate μ/μmax rather than to growth rate directly.  相似文献   

3.
  • 1 The effect of light fluctuations on the growth rates of four species of freshwater phytoplankton was investigated. Experimental light regimes included constant irradiance and fluctuations of a step function form, with equal proportion of high (maximum of 240 µmol photons m‐2 s‐1) and low light (minimum of 5 µmol photons m‐2 s‐1) (or dark) in a period. Fluctuations of 1, 8 and 24‐h periods were imposed over several average irradiances (25, 50, 100 and 120 µmol photons m‐2 s‐1).
  • 2 Growth rate responses to fluctuations were species‐specific and depended on both the average irradiance and the period of fluctuations. Fluctuations at low average irradiances slightly increased growth rate of the diatom Nitzschia sp. and depressed growth of the cyanobacterium Phormidium luridum and the green alga Sphaerocystis schroeteri compared to a constant irradiance.
  • 3 Fluctuations at higher average irradiance did not have a significant effect on the growth rates of Nitzschia sp. and Sphaerocystis schroeteri (fluctuations around saturating irradiances) and slightly increased the growth rates of the cyanobacteria Anabaena flos‐aquae and Phormidium luridum (when irradiance fluctuated between limiting and inhibiting levels).
  • 4 In general, the effect of fluctuations tended to be greater when irradiance fluctuated between limiting and saturating or inhibiting levels of a species growth‐irradiance curve compared to fluctuations within a single region of the curve.
  • 5 The growth rates of species under fluctuating light could not always be predicted from their growth‐irradiance curves obtained under constant irradiance. When fluctuations occur between limiting and saturating or inhibiting irradiances for the alga and when the period of fluctuations is long (greater than 8 h), steady‐state growth‐irradiance curves may be insufficient to predict growth rates adequately. Consequently, additional data on physiological acclimation, such as changes in photosynthetic parameters, may be required for predictions under non‐constant light supply in comparison to constant conditions.
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4.
Previous investigations with planktonic cyanobacteria have suggested that these organisms do not form new gas vesicles in the dark. This study, on Microcystis sp., confirmed that cells that had been preincubated at low photon irradiances (< 15 μmol m-2 s-1) formed negligible amounts of gas vesicles in the dark. Significant gas vesicle formation occurred, however, in cells preincubated continuously at higher irradiances, and particularly within the range 65 to 105 μmol m-2 s-1. The results suggest that gas vesicle formation in the dark is dependent on the prior accumulation of energy reserves. The amount of gas vesicles formed in continuous light was linearly related to irradiance over the range 0 to 20 μmol m-2 s-1, and reached a maximum at only 30 μmol m-2 s-1 that was over five times the amount formed at higher irradiances. This suggests that the rate of gas vesicle formation, regulated directly in response to irradiance, has a role in the light-mediated buoyancy regulation of this cyanobacterium.  相似文献   

5.
The growth characteristics of Haematococcus pluvialis Flotow were determined in batch culture. Optimal temperature for growth of the alga was between 25° and 28°C, at which the specific growth rate was 0.054 h?1. At higher temperatures, no cell division was observed, and cell diameter increased from 5 to 25 μm. The saturated irradiance for growth of the alga was 90 μmol quanta · m?2·s?1; under higher irradiances (e.g. 400 μmol quanta·m?2·s?1) astaxanthin accumulation was induced. Growth rate, cell cycle, and astaxanthin accumulation were significantly affected by growth conditions. Careful attention should be given to the use of optimal growth conditions when studying these processes.  相似文献   

6.
The present study describes a strain of Gloeocapsa sp. designated as Gacheva 2007/R‐06/1, originally isolated from a geothermal flow located in Rupite, Bulgaria. To evaluate whether this cyanobacterium is locally adapted to hot environment or has the ability to tolerate lower temperatures, its growth, biochemical composition, enzyme isoforms and activity of the main antioxidant enzymes and proteases were characterized under various temperatures and two irradiance levels. The strain was able to grow over the whole temperature range (15–40°C) under two different photon fluence densities – 132 μmol photons m?2 s?1 (unilateral, low light, LL) and 2 × 132 μmol photons m?2 s?1 (bilateral, high light, HL). The best growth occurred at either 34°C and LL or at 36°C and HL, but significant growth inhibition was noted at 15°C and 40°C. Low temperature treatment (15°C) resulted in higher levels of total protein and an increased activity of manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) and glutathione reductase, as compared to optimum growth temperatures. After simultaneous exposure to 15°C and HL, increases in lipid content and activity of iron superoxide dismutase and catalase (CAT) were also observed. Cultivation of cells at 40°C enhanced MnSOD, CAT and peroxidase activities, regardless of irradiance level. Increased total protein content and protease activity at 40°C was only associated with the HL treatment. Overall, these results indicate that Gloeocapsa sp. strain Gacheva 2007/R‐06/1 used different strategies to enable cells to efficiently acclimate and withstand adverse low or high temperatures. This strain obviously tolerates a wide range of temperatures below its natural habitat temperature, and does not seem to be locally adapted to its original thermal regime. It behaved as a thermotolerant rather than a thermophilic cyanobacterium, which suggests its wider distribution in nature.  相似文献   

7.
Photoautotrophic growth of a marine non-heterocystous filamentous cyanobacterium, Symploca sp. strain S84, was examined under nitrate-assimilating and N2-fixing conditions. Under continuous light, photon flux density of 55 μmol photons·m−2 ·s−1 was at a saturating level for growth, and light did not inhibit the growth rate under N2-fixing conditions even when the photon flux density was doubled (110 μmol photons·m−2 ·s−1). Doubling times of the N2-fixing cultures under 55 and 110 μmol photons·m−2 ·s−1 were about 30 and 31 h, respectively. Under 110 μmol photons·m−2 ·s−1 during the light phase of an alternating 12:12-h light:dark (L:D) cycle, the doubling time of the N2-fixing culture was also about 30 h. When grown diazotrophically under a 12:12-h L:D regime, C2H2 reduction activity was observed mainly during darkness. In continuous light, relatively large cyclic fluctuations in C2H2 reduction were observed during growth. The short-term (<4 h) effect of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU; 5 μM) indicated that C2H2 reduction activity was not influenced by photosynthetic O2 evolution. Long-term (24 h) effects of DCMU indicated that photosynthesis and C2H2 reduction activity occur simultaneously. These results indicate that strain S84 grows well under diazotrophic conditions when saturating light is supplied either continuously or under a 12:12-h L:D diel light regime.  相似文献   

8.
African violet (Saintpaulia ionantha H. Wendl) is one of the most easily and commonly tissue-cultured ornamental plants. Despite this, there are limited reports on photosynthetic capacity and its impact on the plant quality during acclimatization. Various growth, photosynthetic and biochemical parameters and activities of antioxidant enzymes and dehydrins of micropropagated plants were assessed under three light intensities (35, 70, and 100 µmol m?2 s?1 photosynthetic photon flux density – PPFD). Fresh and dry plant biomass, plant height, and leaf area were optimal with high irradiance (70–100 µmol m?2 s?1 PPFD). Chlorophyll and carotenoid contents and net photosynthesis were optimal in plants grown under 70 µmol m?2 s?1 PPFD. Stomatal resistance, malondialdehyde content, and Fv/Fm values were highest at low light irradiance (35 µmol m?2 s?1 PPFD). The activities of three antioxidant enzymes, superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glutathione peroxidase, increased as light irradiance increased, signaling that high light irradiance was an abiotic stress. The accumulation of 55, 33, and 25 kDa dehydrins was observed with all light treatments although the expression levels were highest at 35 µmol m?2 s?1 PPFD. Irradiance at 70 µmol m?2 s?1 PPFD was suitable for the acclimatization of African violet plants. Both low and high irradiance levels (35 and 100 µmol m?2 s?1 PPFD) induced the accumulation of antioxidants and dehydrins in plants which reveals enhanced stress levels and measures to counter it.  相似文献   

9.
Three Antarctic nanophytoflagellates (two cryptophyte species and a Pyramimonas sp.) were compared for their capacity to phiotoacclimate and for their kinetic responses in changing photic environments. Division rate, cell size cellular fluorescence, and chlorophyll a content were measured steady and transient states of semi-continuous cultures maintain at 1.0° C. Of all parameters tested, cell size was most affected by irradiance. Acclimation kinetics were modeled using a first-order equation. Rates of change in cell size following shifts in irradiance were comparable with rates of change in chemical composition reported for temperate algae. Response rates of cellular in vivo red and orange fluorescence were lower. In many cases, however, responses could not be described by the first-order kinetic model. Division rates remained high for approximately 3 days following a shift down in irradiance, after which new division rates were established. The nanoflagellates studied here appear to respond to small irradiance perturbations at low rates. However, they may fail to adapt and abrupt changes in photon flux density (PFD). When shade-adapted (25 μmol, m?2, m?2, s?1) cells were exposed to high PFD (400 μmol, m?2, s?1) for 1–3 days, cell were incapable of readapting division rate and pigment content to the initial irradiance condition (25 μmol, m?2, s?1) for about 1 month following the shift-down step. The ecological role of the kinetics of photoacclimation in nanophytoflagellate growth performance in Antarctic ecosystems is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Photosynthetic pigments, C, N, and P tissue composition, and photosynthetic rate were measured from April to October in the brown alga Phyllariopsis purpurascens (C. Agardh) Henry et South (Laminariales, Phaeophyta) growing at a 30-m depth in the Strait of Gibraltar. Ir-radiance reaching the population ranged from 13.5 to 27.5 mol.m-2.mo-1. The available light for this species, expressed as a percentage of the irradiance above the water, was 1.8%. Dissolved inorganic nitrogen forms, NO3-and NH4+, were constant from April to October, whereas phosphate was depleted in August. Chlorophyll a decreased from 520.0 ± 165.0 to 199.6 ± 159.9 μg.g-1 dry weight; in contrast, chlorophyll c and carotenoids did not change until September but increased threefold in October. C:N and N:P ratios changed in the same way and in the same range. They were constant until July but increased from 15–17 up to 42 (C:N) and from 14 to 40 (N:P) in October, suggesting a severe P limitation of growth of this species. The dark respiration rate and the light compensation point were constant from April to October (0.5 ± 0.1 μmol O2. m-2.s-1 and 6.5 ± 0.2 μmol.m-2. s-1, respectively), whereas the maximum rate of apparent photosynthesis, light onset saturation parameter, and half saturation constant for light were maximum in April to May (3.7 μmol O2. m-2.s-1and 40 and 41.5 μmol.m-2. s-1, respectively) and October (3.6 μmol O2. m-2.s-1 and 50 and 53.7 μmol.m-2. s-1, respectively). They were minimum in August (1.2 μmol O2.m-2.s-1 and 11.3 and 12 μmol.m-2.s-1, respectively). These minimum figures yielded a negative carbon budget in August and 0 in September, whereas it was positive the rest of the year. Photosynthetic efficiency, estimated by the ratio between maximum apparent photosynthesis and light half saturation constant, showed a strong agreement with productivity measured by means of an independent method. These results indicate that lamina expansion in this species is controlled by photosynthetic efficiency.  相似文献   

11.
The survivorship of dipterocarp seedlings in the deeply shaded understorey of South‐east Asian rain forests is limited by their ability to maintain a positive carbon balance. Photosynthesis during sunflecks is an important component of carbon gain. To investigate the effect of elevated CO2 upon photosynthesis and growth under sunflecks, seedlings of Shorealeprosula were grown in controlled environment conditions at ambient or elevated CO2. Equal total daily photon flux density (PFD) (~7·7 mol m?2 d?1) was supplied as either uniform irradiance (~170 µmol m?2 s?1) or shade/fleck sequences (~30 µmol m?2 s?1/~525 µmol m?2 s?1). Photosynthesis and growth were enhanced by elevated CO2 treatments but lower under flecked irradiance treatments. Acclimation of photosynthetic capacity occurred in response to elevated CO2 but not flecked irradiance. Importantly, the relative enhancement effects of elevated CO2 were greater under sunflecks (growth 60%, carbon gain 89%) compared with uniform irradiance (growth 25%, carbon gain 59%). This was driven by two factors: (1) greater efficiency of dynamic photosynthesis (photosynthetic induction gain and loss, post‐irradiance gas exchange); and (2) photosynthetic enhancement being greatest at very low PFD. This allowed improved carbon gain during both clusters of lightflecks (73%) and intervening periods of deep shade (99%). The relatively greater enhancement of growth and photosynthesis at elevated CO2 under sunflecks has important potential consequences for seedling regeneration processes and hence forest structure and composition.  相似文献   

12.
Photosynthesis of marine benthic diatom mats was examined before and after sea ice breakout at a coastal site in eastern Antarctica (Casey). Before ice breakout the maximum under‐ice irradiance was between 2.5 and 8.2 μmol photons·m?2·s?1 and the benthic microalgal community was characterized by low Ek (12.1–32.3 μmol photons·m?2·s?1), low relETRmax (9.2–32.9), and high alpha (0.69–1.1). After breakout, 20 days later, the maximum irradiance had increased to between 293 and 840 μmol photons·m?2·s?1, Ek had increased by more than an order of magnitude (to 301–395 μmol photons·m?2·s?1), relETRmax had increased by more than five times (to 104–251), and alpha decreased by approximately 50% (to 0.42–0.68). During the same time interval the species composition of the mats changed, with a decline in the abundance of Trachyneis aspera (Karsten) Hustedt, Gyrosigma subsalsum Van Heurck, and Thalassiosira gracilis (Karsten) Hustedt and an increase in the abundance of Navicula glaciei Van Heurck. The benthic microalgal mats at Casey showed that species composition and photophysiology changed in response to the sudden natural increase in irradiance. This occurred through both succession shifts in the species composition of the mats and also an ability of individual cells to photoacclimate to the higher irradiances.  相似文献   

13.
Thalassiosira oceanica (CCMP 1005) was grown over a range of copper concentrations at saturating and subsaturating irradiance to test the hypothesis that Cu and light were interacting essential resources. Growth was a hyperbolic function of irradiance in Cu‐replete medium (263 fmol Cu′ · L?1) with maximum rates achieved at 200 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1. Lowering the Cu concentration at this irradiance to 30.8 fmol Cu′ · L?1 decreased cellular Cu quota by 7‐fold and reduced growth rate by 50%. Copper‐deficient cells had significantly slower (P < 0.0001) rates of maximum, relative photosynthetic electron transport (rETRmax) than Cu‐sufficient cells, consistent with the role of Cu in photosynthesis in this diatom. In low‐Cu medium (30.8 fmol Cu′ · L?1), growth rate was best described as a positive, linear function of irradiance and reached the maximum value measured in Cu‐replete cells when irradiance increased to 400 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1. Thus, at high light, low‐Cu concentration was no longer limiting to growth: Cu concentration and light interacted strongly to affect growth rate of T. oceanica (P < 0.0001). Relative ETRmax and Cu quota of cells grown at low Cu also increased at 400 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1 to levels measured in Cu‐replete cells. Steady‐state uptake rates of Cu‐deficient and sufficient cells were light‐dependent, suggesting that faster growth of T. oceanica under high light and low Cu was a result of light‐stimulated Cu uptake.  相似文献   

14.
Mesodinium rubrum (=Myrionecta rubra), a marine ciliate, acquires plastids, mitochondria, and nuclei from cryptophyte algae. Using a strain of M. rubrum isolated from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica, we investigated the photoacclimation potential of this trophically unique organism at a range of low irradiance levels. The compensation growth irradiance for M. rubrum was 0.5 μmol quanta · m−2 · s−1, and growth rate saturated at ∼20 μmol quanta · m−2 · s−1. The strain displayed trends in photosynthetic efficiency and pigment content characteristic of marine phototrophs. Maximum chl a–specific photosynthetic rates were an order of magnitude slower than temperate strains, while growth rates were half as large, suggesting that a thermal limit to enzyme kinetics produces a fundamental limit to cell function. M. rubrum acclimates to light‐ and temperature‐limited polar conditions and closely regulates photosynthesis in its cryptophyte organelles. By acquiring and maintaining physiologically viable, plastic plastids, M. rubrum establishes a selective advantage over purely heterotrophic ciliates but reduces competition with other phototrophs by exploiting a very low‐light niche.  相似文献   

15.
The compensation point for growth of Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin is less than 1 μmol. m?2s?1. Growth at low PFDs (<3.5 μmol. m?2.s?1) does not appear to reduce the maximum quantum efficiency of photosynthesis (øm) or to greatly inhibit the potential for light-saturated, carbon-specific photosynthesis (Pmc). The value for øm in P. tricornutum is 0.10–0.12 mol O2-mol photon?1, independent of acclimation PFD between 0.75 and 200 μmol.m?2.s?1 in nutrient-sufficient cultures. Pmc in cells of P. tricornutum acclimated to PFDs <3.5 μmol m?2?s?1 is approximately 50% of the highest value obtained in nutrient-sufficient cultures acclimated to growth-rate-saturating PFDs. In addition, growth at low PFDs does not severely restrict the ability of cells to respond to an increase in light level. Cultures acclimated to growth at lees than 1% of the light-saturated growth rate respond rapidly to a shift-up in PFD after a short initial lag period and achieve exponential growth rates of 1.0 d?1 (65% of the light- and nutrient-saturated maximum growth rate) at both 40 and 200 μmol.m?2.s?1  相似文献   

16.
The effects of Fe deficiency on the marine cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. were examined in batch cultures grown on nitrate or ammonium as a sole nitrogen source under two different irradiances. Fe-stressed cells showed lower chlorophyll a content and cellular C and N quotas. Light limitation increased the critical iron concentration below which both suppression of growth rate and changes in cellular composition were observed. At a limiting irradiance (26 μmol.m−2.s−1), this critical value was ∼10 nM, a 10 times increase compared to high-light cultures. Moreover, at low light the cellular chlorophyll a concentration was higher than at saturating light (110 μmol.m−2.s−1), this difference being most pronounced under Fe-stressed conditions. Cells grown on ammonium showed a lower half-saturation constant for Fe (Ks) compared to cells grown on nitrate, indicating Synechococcus sp. has the ability to grow faster on ammonium than on nitrate in a low Fe environment at high light. Consequently, in high-nutrient and low-chlorophyll regions where Fe limits new production, cyanobacteria most likely grow on regenerated ammonium, which requires less energy for assimilation. The Ks for growth on Fe at low light was significantly higher than at high light compared with the cells grown on the same N source, suggesting the cells require more Fe at low light. Therefore, if cells that are already Fe-limited also become light-limited, their iron stress level will increase even more. For cyanobacteria this is the first report of a study combining the interactions of Fe limitation, light limitation, and nitrogen source (NO3 vs. NH4+).  相似文献   

17.
Environmental variables such as temperature, salinity, and irradiance are significant drivers of microalgal growth and distribution. Therefore, understanding how these variables influence fitness of potentially toxic microalgal species is particularly important. In this study, strains of the potentially harmful epibenthic dinoflagellate species Coolia palmyrensis, C. malayensis, and C. tropicalis were isolated from coastal shallow water habitats on the east coast of Australia and identified using the D1‐D3 region of the large subunit (LSU) ribosomal DNA (rDNA). To determine the environmental niche of each taxon, growth was measured across a gradient of temperature (15–30°C), salinity (20–38), and irradiance (10–200 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1). Specific growth rates of Coolia tropicalis were highest under warm temperatures (27°C), low salinities (ca. 23), and intermediate irradiance levels (150 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1), while C. malayensis showed the highest growth at moderate temperatures (24°C) and irradiance levels (150 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1) and growth rates were consistent across the range of salinity levels tested (20–38). Coolia palmyrensis had the highest growth rate of all species tested and favored moderate temperatures (24°C), oceanic salinity (35), and high irradiance (>200 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1). This is the first study to characterize the environmental niche of species from the benthic harmful algal bloom genus Coolia and provides important information to help define species distributions and inform risk management.  相似文献   

18.
Physiological properties of the temperate hermatypic coral Acropora pruinosa Brook with symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae) on the southern coast of the Izu Peninsula, Shizuoka Prefecture, central Japan, were compared between summer and winter. Photosynthesis and respiration rates of the coral with symbiotic zooxanthellae were measured in summer and winter under controlled temperatures and irradiances with a differential gasvolumeter (Productmeter). Net photosynthetic rate under all irradiances was higher in winter than in summer at the lower range of temperature (12–20°C), while lower than in summer at the higher range of temperature (20–30°C). The optimum temperature for net photosynthesis was apt to fall with the decrease of irradiance both in summer and winter, whereas it was higher in summer than in winter under each irradiance. At 25/ 50/100 μmol photons nr2 s?1, it was nearly the sea‐water temperature in each season. Dark respiration rate was higher in winter than in summer, especially in the range from 20–30°C. In both seasons the optimum temperature for gross photosynthesis was 28°C under 400 μmol photons nr2 s?1 and lowered with decreasing irradiance up to 22°C under 25 μmol photons nr2 s?1 in summer, while 20°C under the same irradiance in winter. The optimum temperature for production/respiration (P/R) ratio was higher in summer than in winter under each irradiance. Results indicated that metabolism of coral and zooxanthellae is adapted to ambient temperature condition under nearly natural irradiance in each season.  相似文献   

19.
The macroalga Ulva ohnoi constitutes a considerable fraction of green tides in coastal areas of Japan, but little is known about the physiological characteristics of this species. To investigate the environmental factors that promote the formation of green tides, we tested the responses of U. ohnoi and another common Japanese species, Ulva pertusa, to various levels of irradiance at different water temperatures. Because the two species are morphologically similar, we identified them using the PCR‐restriction fragment length polymorphism method. Under laboratory conditions, we evaluated the photosynthetic, dark respiration, and relative growth rate at a range of water temperatures (5 to 35°C) and photosynthetically active radiation (0 to 1000 μmol photons m?2 s?1). The maximum gross photosynthetic rate of U. ohnoi was larger than that of U. pertusa. The dark respiration rates revealed no significant differences among the species and temperature conditions. At 500 μmol photons m?2 s?1, the relative growth rate of U. ohnoi was larger than that of U. pertusa in higher temperature and the difference was the largest at 20°C. The estimated compensation irradiance and estimated saturation irradiance of U. ohnoi and U. pertusa ranged from 0.709 to 5.510 and 40.530 to 58.674 μmol photons m?2 s?1, which were lower than those in other intertidal green macroalgae, from 6 to 11 and 50 to 82 μmol photons m?2 s?1, respectively. Thus, U. ohnoi which exists as free‐floating near the water surface and accumulating inside the green tide can survive extensively in the water column of the intertidal zone, furthermore, the species can maintain rapid growth in this situation. Therefore, as a result of this study, it is suggested that the ecological success of U. ohnoi in shallow waters such as the tidal flats, estuarine, and coasts of the inner bay in comparison with U. pertusa.  相似文献   

20.
Nostoc commune Vaucher (a cyanobacterium) is a very conspicuous terrestrial primary producer in Victoria Land, continental Antarctica. Because polar ecosystems are considered to be especially sensitive to environmental changes, understanding the environmental constraints on net carbon (C) fixation by N. commune is necessary to determine the effects of environmental changes on the ecological functioning of ice‐free areas of the continent. A model describing net C fixation in terrestrial populations of N. commune in an Antarctic dry valley was constructed using field and laboratory measurements in which N. commune colonies were exposed to different combinations of incident irradiance (400–700 nm), temperature, and degree of desiccation. For desiccated N. commune mats with water content ≤ 30% saturation, net C fixation was highly variable between replicates and could not be modelled. However, for colonies at > 30% saturation, rates of net C fixation and dark respiration depended strongly on irradiance and temperature. Net C fixation reached a maximum rate of 21.6 μg C m− 2 s− 1 at irradiance of approximately 250 μmol m− 2 s− 1 and the optimum temperature of 20.5 °C. Agreement between predicted short‐term net C fixation and field and laboratory measurements allowed estimation of total seasonal fixation, using previously published environmental data. Annual net C fixation was estimated in the range 14.5–21.0 g C fixed m− 2Nostoc mat, depending on year/season. Estimates for different seasons correlated with thermal time (accumulated hours above 0 °C during the year) rather than irradiance, in contrast to communities in local lacustrine environments, where irradiance is the main driver of primary productivity. In the terrestrial habitat, N. commune appears to compromise between an ability to capitalize on short periods of higher temperature and efficient utilization of lower irradiance at low temperature. The relationship between thermal time and net annual C fixation by N. commune is strongly linear.  相似文献   

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