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1.
Twelve species, representing 12 families of the chrysophytes sensu lato, were tested for their ability to take up inorganic carbon. Using the pH‐drift technique, CO2 compensation points generally varied between 1 and 20 μmol · L?1 with a mean concentration of 5 μmol · L?1. Neither pH nor alkalinity affected the CO2 compensation point. The concentration of oxygen had a relatively minor effect on CO2‐uptake kinetics, and the mean CO2 compensation point calculated from the kinetic curves was 3.6 μmol · L?1 at 10–15 kPa starting oxygen partial pressure and 3.8 μmol · L?1 at atmospheric starting oxygen partial pressure (21 kPa). Similarly, uptake kinetics were not affected by alkalinity, and hence concentration of bicarbonate. Membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS) in the presence and absence of acetazolamide suggested that external carbonic anhydrase in Dinobryon sertularia Ehrenb. and Synura petersenii Korschikov was either very low or absent. Rates of net HCO3? uptake were very low (~5% of oxygen evolution) using MIMS and decreased rather than increased with increasing HCO3? concentration, suggesting that it was not a real uptake. The CO2 compensation points determined by MIMS for CO2 uptake and oxygen evolution were similar to those determined in pH‐drift and were >1 μmol · L?1. Overall, the results suggest that chrysophytes as a group lack a carbon‐concentrating mechanism (CCM), or an ability to make use of bicarbonate as an alternative source of inorganic carbon. The possible evolutionary and ecological consequences of this are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Rates of carbon fixation in coccolithophorids in culture, unlike many other algae, are carbon limited at ambient levels of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). Apparently, plants often rely on activity of carbonic anhydrase (CA) to raise the level of CO2 in cells and achieve carbon saturation. However, CA activities in the coccolithophorids, Coccolithus (= Emiliania) huxleyi Lohmann and Hymenomonas (=Cricosphaera) carterae Braarud, were either not detectable or very low compared to activities in other systems, including other algae, higher plants, and representative animals. Furthermore, additions of CA to medium with 2 mM DIC at pH 8.1 resulted in nearly 30% enhancement of photosynthesis, but not coccolith formation. Although carbon fixation in coccolithophorids can be suppressed by the CA inhibitor acetazolamide, studies of CaCO3 nucleation revealed a non-specific effect of the inhibitor. Using a 30 min assay based on pH decreases accompanying loss of dissolved. CO32-, inhibition of crystal formation in the absence of CA at 1 mM acetazolamide was demonstrated for decalcified crab carapace, a tissue with which normal CaCo3 deposition in vitro has been shown. The results suggest only a minor role for CA in coccolithophorids.  相似文献   

3.
To test the possibility of inorganic carbon limitation of the marine unicellular alga Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) Hay and Mohler, its carbon acquisition was measured as a function of the different chemical species of inorganic carbon present in the medium. Because these different species are interdependent and covary in any experiment in which the speciation is changed, a set of experiments was performed to produce a multidimensional carbon uptake scheme for photosynthesis and calcification. This scheme shows that CO2 that is used for photosynthesis comes from two sources. The CO2 in seawater supports a modest rate of photosynthesis. The HCO is the major substrate for photosynthesis by intracellular production of CO2 (HCO+ H+→ CO2+ H2O → CH2O + O2). This use of HCO is possible because of the simultaneous calcification using a second HCO, which provides the required proton (HCO+ Ca2+→ CaCO3+ H+). The HCO is the only substrate for calcification. By distinguishing the two sources of CO2 used in photosynthesis, it was shown that E. huxleyi has a K½ for external CO2 of “only” 1.9 ± 0.5 μM (and a Vmax of 2.4 ± 0.1 pmol·cell−1·d−1). Thus, in seawater that is in equilibrium with the atmosphere ([CO2]= 14 μM, [HCO]= 1920 μM, at fCO2= 360 μatm, pH = 8, T = 15° C), photosynthesis is 90% saturated with external CO2. Under the same conditions, the rate of photosynthesis is doubled by the calcification route of CO2 supply (from 2.1 to 4.5 pmol·cell−1·d−1). However, photosynthesis is not fully saturated, as calcification has a K½ for HCO of 3256 ± 1402 μM and a Vmax of 6.4 ± 1.8 pmol·cell−1·d−1. The H+ that is produced during calcification is used with an efficiency of 0.97 ± 0.08, leading to the conclusion that it is used intracellularly. A maximum efficiency of 0.88 can be expected, as NO uptake generates a H+ sink (OH source) for the cell. The success of E. huxleyi as a coccolithophorid may be related to the efficient coupling between H+ generation in calcification and CO2 fixation in photosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Kinetics of uptake of inorganic carbon by the freshwater green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang. suggest that rates of fixation may be enhanced at low tensions of CO2 by transport of bicarbonate from the cell surface to the chloroplast. Results are evaluated in the context of models that treat diffusion and reaction of dissolved inorganic carbon across a 3 dimensional finite boundary layer, and they are consistent with the claim that CO2 alone is the substrate used during carbon fixation. An alternative hypothesis, which presumes that both CO2 and bicarbonate are used as substrates, yields predictions which are inconsistent with the data. Instead, bicarbonate seems to act only as a vehicle for the transport of inorganic carbon into the cell, thereby adding its flux to that of CO2, and enhancing rates of synthesis that would otherwise be restricted by uptake of CO2 alone.  相似文献   

5.
The processes of CO2 acquisition were characterized for the acid‐tolerant, free‐living chlorophyte alga, CPCC 508. rDNA data indicate an affiliation to the genus Coccomyxa, but distinct from other known members of the genus. The alga grows over a wide range of pH from 3.0 to 9.0. External carbonic anhydrase (CA) was detected in cells grown above pH 5, with the activity increasing marginally from pH 7 to 9, but most of the CA activity was internal. The capacity for HCO3? uptake of cells treated with the CA inhibitor acetazolamide (AZA), was investigated by comparing the calculated rate of uncatalyzed CO2 formation with the rate of photosynthesis. Active bicarbonate transport occurred in cells grown in media above pH 7.0. Monitoring CO2 uptake and O2 evolution by membrane‐inlet mass spectrometry demonstrated that air‐grown cells reduced the CO2 concentration in the medium to an equilibrium concentration of 15 μM, but AZA‐treated cells caused a drop in extracellular CO2 concentration to a compensation concentration of 27 μM at pH 8.0. CO2‐pulsing experiments with cells in the light indicated that the cells do not actively take up CO2. An internal pool of unfixed inorganic carbon was not detected at the CO2 compensation concentration, probably because of the lack of active CO2 uptake, but was detectable at times before compensation point was reached. These results indicate that this free‐living Coccomyxa possesses a CO2‐concentrating mechanism (CCM) due to an active bicarbonate‐uptake system, unlike the Coccomyxa sp. occurring in symbiotic association with lichens.  相似文献   

6.
Inorganic carbon acquisition has been investigated in the marine haptophyte Isochrysis galbana. External carbonic anhydrase (CA) was present in air‐grown (0.034% CO2) cells but completely repressed in high (3%) CO2‐grown cells. External CA was not inhibited by 1.0 mM acetazolamide. The capacity of cells to take up bicarbonate was examined by comparing the rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution with the calculated rate of spontaneous CO2 supply; at pH 8.2 the rates of O2 evolution exceeded the CO2 supply rate 14‐fold, indicating that this alga was able to take up HCO3 ? . Monitoring CO2 concentrations by mass spectrometry showed that suspensions of high CO2‐grown cells caused a rapid drop in the extracellular CO2 in the light and addition of bovine CA raised the CO2 concentration by restoring the HCO3 ? ‐CO2 equilibrium, indicating that cells were maintaining the CO2 in the medium below its equilibrium value during photosynthesis. A rapid increase in extracellular CO2 concentration occurred on darkening the cells, indicating that the cells had accumulated an internal pool of unfixed inorganic carbon. Active CO2 uptake was blocked by the photosynthetic electron transport inhibitor 3‐(3′,4′‐dichlorphenyl)‐1,1‐dimethylurea, indicating that CO2 transport was supported by photosynthetic reactions. These results demonstrate that this species has the capacity to take up HCO3 ? and CO2 actively as sources of substrate for photosynthesis and that inorganic carbon transport is not repressed by growth on high CO2, although external CA expression is regulated by CO2 concentration.  相似文献   

7.
Chlorella emersonii Shihira et Krauss var. emersonii exhibits ‘C4-like’ gas exchange characteristics when grown at air levels of CO2, but is ‘C3-like’ when grown with extra CO2. The total inorganic carbon concentration, and the free CO2 concentration, averaged over the cell interior are higher in air-adapted cells than can be accounted for by passive CO2 equilibration from the medium and the mean intracellular pH value. The ‘extra’ inorganic C in the air-grown cells probably cannot all be accounted for in terms of binding to proteins and requires an active transport process to account for it. The electrical potential of the cell interior becomes more negative when the ‘CO2 concentrating mechanism’ is operative; this is most readily explained if the active step in inorganic C accumulation is primary active uniport of HCO3?. Since the ‘CO2 concentrating mechanism’ can operate when CO2 is the species crossing the outer permeation barrier, it is suggested that the site of active HCO3? transport in Chlorella (and other eukaryotes) is the chloroplast envelope, and the plasmalemma in cyanobacteria. This scheme explains the obligatory role of the de-repressed carbonic anhydrase in C4-like photosynthesis in algae, but some other data support an explanation of C4-like photosynthesis in terms of special properties of carbonic anhydrase as a carbon donor to RuBP carboxylase-oxygenase.  相似文献   

8.
Increasing anthropogenic carbon dioxide is causing changes to ocean chemistry, which will continue in a predictable manner. Dissolution of additional atmospheric carbon dioxide leads to increased concentrations of dissolved carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and decreased pH in ocean water. The concomitant effects on phytoplankton ecophysiology, leading potentially to changes in community structure, are now a focus of concern. Therefore, we grew the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) W. W. Hay et H. Mohler and the diatom strains Thalassiosira pseudonana (Hust.) Hasle et Heimdal CCMP 1014 and T. pseudonana CCMP 1335 under low light in turbidostat photobioreactors bubbled with air containing 390 ppmv or 750 ppmv CO2. Increased pCO2 led to increased growth rates in all three strains. In addition, protein levels of RUBISCO increased in the coastal strains of both species, showing a larger capacity for CO2 assimilation at 750 ppmv CO2. With increased pCO2, both T. pseudonana strains displayed an increased susceptibility to PSII photoinactivation and, to compensate, an augmented capacity for PSII repair. Consequently, the cost of maintaining PSII function for the diatoms increased at increased pCO2. In E. huxleyi, PSII photoinactivation and the counter‐acting repair, while both intrinsically larger than in T. pseudonana, did not change between the current and high‐pCO2 treatments. The content of the photosynthetic electron transport intermediary cytochrome b6/f complex increased significantly in the diatoms under elevated pCO2, suggesting changes in electron transport function.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of changes in CO2 and pH on biomass productivity and carbon uptake of Pleurochrysis carterae and Emiliania huxleyi in open raceway ponds and a plate photobioreactor were studied. The pH of P. carterae cultures increased during day and decreased at night, whereas the pH of E. huxleyi cultures showed no significant diurnal changes. P. carterae coccolith production occurs during the dark period, whereas in E. huxleyi, coccolith production is mainly during the day. Addition of CO2 at constant pH (pH-stat) resulted in an increase in P. carterae biomass and coccolith productivity, while CO2 addition lowered E. huxleyi biomass and coccolith production. Neither of these algae could grow at less than pH 7.5. Species-specific diurnal pH and pCO2 variations could be indicative of significant differences in carbon uptake between these two species. While E. huxleyi has been suggested to be predominantly a bicarbonate user, our results indicate that P. carterae may be using CO2 as the main C source for photosynthesis and calcification.  相似文献   

10.
The availability and composition of dissolved nitrogen in ocean waters are factors that influence species composition in natural phytoplankton communities. The same factors affect the ratio of organic to inorganic carbon incorporation in calcifying species, such as the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi (Lohman) W. W. Hay et H. Mohler. E. huxleyi has been shown to thrive on various nitrogen sources, including dissolved organic nitrogen. Nevertheless, assimilation of dissolved nitrogen under nitrogen‐replete and ‐limited conditions is not well understood in this ecologically important species. In this study, the complete amino acid sequences for three functional genes involved in nitrogen metabolism in E. huxleyi were identified: a putative formamidase, a glutamine synthetase (GSII family), and assimilatory nitrate reductase. Expression patterns of the three enzymes in cells grown on inorganic as well as organic nitrogen sources indicated reduced expression levels of nitrate reductase when cells were grown on NH4+ and a reduced expression level of the putative formamidase when growth was on NO3?. The data reported here suggest the presence of a nitrogen preference hierarchy in E. huxleyi. In addition, the gene encoding for a phosphate repressible phosphate permease was more highly expressed in cells growing on formamide than in cells growing on inorganic nitrogen sources. This finding suggests a coupling between phosphate and nitrogen metabolism, which might give this species a competitive advantage in nutrient‐depleted environments. The potential of using expression of genes investigated here as indicators of specific nitrogen‐metabolism strategies of E. huxleyi in natural populations of phytoplankton is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Uptake, efflux and utilization of inorganic carbon were investigated in the marine eustigmatophyte Nannochloropsis sp. grown under an air level of CO2. Maximal photosynthetic rate was hardly affected by raising the pH porn 5.0 to 9.0. The apparent photosynthetic affinity for dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) was 35 μM DIC between pH 6.5 to 9.0, but increased approximately threefold at pH 5.0 suggesting that HCO3- was the main DIC species used from the medium. No external carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity could be detected by the pH drift method. However, application of ethoxyzolamide (an inhibitor of CA) resulted an a significant inhibition of photosynthetic O2 evolution and carbon utilization, suggesting involvement of internal CA or CA-like activity in DIC utilization. Under high light conditions, the rate of HCO3? uptake and its internal conversion to CO2 apparently exceeded the rate of carbon fixation, resulting in a large leak of CO2 from the cells to the external medium. When the cells were exposed to low DIC concentrations, the ratio of internal to external DIC concentration was about eight. On the other hand, in the presence of 2 mM DIC, conditions prevailing in the marine environment, the internal concentration of DIC was only 50% higher than the external one.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism of inorganic carbon (Ci) acquisition by the economic brown macroalga, Hizikia fusiforme (Harv.) Okamura (Sargassaceae), was investigated to characterize its photosynthetic physiology. Both intracellular and extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA) were detected, with the external CA activity accounting for about 5% of the total. Hizikia fusiforme showed higher rates of photosynthetic oxygen evolution at alkaline pH than those theoretically derived from the rates of uncatalyzed CO2 production from bicarbonate and exhibited a high pH compensation point (pH 9.66). The external CA inhibitor, acetazolamide, significantly depressed the photosynthetic oxygen evolution, whereas the anion‐exchanger inhibitor 4,4′‐diisothiocyano‐stilbene‐2,2′‐disulfonate had no inhibitory effect on it, implying the alga was capable of using HCO3? as a source of Ci for its photosynthesis via the mediation of the external CA. CO2 concentrations in the culture media affected its photosynthetic properties. A high level of CO2 (10,000 ppmv) resulted in a decrease in the external CA activity; however, a low CO2 level (20 ppmv) led to no changes in the external CA activity but raised the intracellular CA activity. Parallel to the reduction in the external CA activity at the high CO2 was a reduction in the photosynthetic CO2 affinity. Decreased activity of the external CA in the high CO2 grown samples led to reduced sensitiveness of photosynthesis to the addition of acetazolamide at alkaline pH. It was clearly indicated that H. fusiforme, which showed CO2‐limited photosynthesis with the half‐saturating concentration of Ci exceeding that of seawater, did not operate active HCO3? uptake but used it via the extracellular CA for its photosynthetic carbon fixation.  相似文献   

13.
Measurements of pH drift were used to assess the ability of 38 red algal seaweeds to use bicarbonate and to deplete the dissolved inorganic carbon pool (DIC) from seawater medium. Subtidal algae were typically restricted to the use of DIC in the form of dissolved CO2, reducing the initial DIC by only 9%. Intertidal species used both dissolved CO2 and bicarbonate and reduced initial DIC by as much as 70%. DIC reductions and pH compensation points for the intertidal species tested were strongly correlated with their vertical zonation on the rocky shoreline (analysis of variance). DIC acquisition efficiency increased with tidal height, but species from the upper edge of the intertidal demonstrated a reversal of this trend. This general pattern associated with tidal height was observed not only among intertidal red algae in general, but also among four species of the genus Porphyra (P. torta V. Krishnamurthy, P. papenfussii Krishnamurthy, P. perforata J. Agardh, P. fucicola Krishnamurthy) and among four populations of the broadly distributed species Mastocarpus papillatus (C. Agardh). The Mastocarpus observations suggest either that individuals of this species may be able to express alternate strategies for carbon acquisition or that intertidal height may select for survivorship of genotypes with different carbon acquisition strategies. Taken together, these data suggest that the carbon acquisition strategy of intertidal red algae may be an important physiological set of adaptations that is under active evolutionary selection. These physiological differences were not related to phylogeny, tested as membership in red algal families and orders.  相似文献   

14.
Inorganic carbon uptake was investigated in two marine dinoflagellates, Amphidinium carterae Hulburt and Heterocapsa oceanica Stein. Mass spectrometric and potentiometric assays indicated that both species lacked external carbonic anhydrase (CA). The presence of internal CA was demonstrated by potentiometric assay and by the inhibition of photosynthesis upon the addition of 500 μM ethoxyzolamide a membrane‐permeable inhibitor of CA. The capacity for bicarbonate transport was investigated by comparing the calculated rate of spontaneous CO2 formation at pH 8.2 and 25°C with the rate of photosynthesis after the addition of 100 μM NaHCO3. Both species appeared to have a very limited capacity for direct bicarbonate uptake. Monitoring of CO2 and O2 fluxes in both species by mass spectrometry demonstrated a rapid uptake of CO2 on illumination, to concentrations below the CO2 equilibrium concentration, indicating an effective selective uptake of CO2. This dependence of photosynthesis on free CO2 alone suggests that these species are CO2 limited in their natural environment because the CO2 concentration of seawater is very low.  相似文献   

15.
There is still considerable uncertainty about the relationship between calcification and photosynthesis. It has been suggested that since calcification in coccolithophorids is an intracellular process that releases CO2, it enhances photosynthesis in a manner analogous to a carbon‐concentrating mechanism (CCM). The ubiquitous, bloom‐forming, and numerically abundant coccolithophorid Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) W. W. Hay et H. Mohler was studied in nutrient‐replete, pH and [CO2] controlled, continuous cultures (turbidostats) under a range of [Ca2+] from 0 to 9 mM. We examined the long‐term, fully acclimated photosynthesis‐light responses and analyzed the crystalline structure of the coccoliths using SEM. The E. huxleyi cells completely lost their coccosphere when grown in 0 [Ca2+], while thin, undercalcified and brittle coccoliths were evident at 1 mM [Ca2+]. Coccoliths showed increasing levels of calcification with increasing [Ca2+]. More robust coccoliths were noted, with no discernable differences in coccolith morphology when the cells were grown in either 5 or 9 mM (ambient seawater) [Ca2+]. In contrast to calcification, photosynthesis was not affected by the [Ca2+] in the media. Cells showed no correlation of their light‐dependent O2 evolution with [Ca2+], and in all [Ca2+]‐containing turbidostats, there were no significant differences in growth rate. The results show unequivocally that as a process, photosynthesis in E. huxleyi is mechanistically independent from calcification.  相似文献   

16.
Carbon uptake in the green macroalga Cladophora glomerata (L.) Kütz. from the brackish Baltic Sea was studied by recording changes in pH, alkalinity, and inorganic carbon concentration of the seawater medium during photosynthesis. The use of specific inhibitors identified three uptake mechanisms: 1) dehydration of HCO3 ? into CO2 by periplasmic carbonic anhydrase, followed by diffusion of CO2 into the cell; 2) direct uptake of HCO3 ? via a 4,4′‐diisothiocyanato‐stilbene‐2,2′‐disulfonate‐sensitive mechanism; and 3) uptake of inorganic carbon by the involvement of a vanadate‐sensitive P‐type H + ‐ATPase (proton pump). A decrease in the alkalinity of the seawater medium during carbon uptake, except when treated with vanadate, indicated a net uptake of the ionic species contributing to alkalinity (i.e. HCO3 ? , CO32 ? , and OH ? ) from the medium, where OH ? influx is equivalent to H + efflux. This would suggest that the proton pump is involved in HCO3 ? transport. We also show that the proton pump can be induced by carbon limitation. The inducibility of carbon uptake in C. glomerata may partly explain why this species is so successful in the upper littoral zone of the Baltic Sea. Usually, carbon limitation is not a problem in the upper littoral of the sea. However, it may occur frequently within dense Cladophora belts with high photosynthetic rates that create high pH and low carbon concentrations in the alga's microenvironment.  相似文献   

17.
The carboxysome content of chemostat grown Synechococcus leopoliensis (Racib.) Komarek increases under inorganic carbon limitation. At growth rates of ca. 85%μmax the carboxysome content (±SE) was 0.57 ± 0.09 carboxysomes·cell section?1. Under severe carbon limitation (ca. 13%μmax) this increased to 3.4 · 0.3 carboxysomes·cell section?1. Corresponding to this change is a three order of magnitude decrease in the half-saturation constant of photosynthesis for dissolved inorganic carbon. Nitrogen and phosphorus limitation had no effect on carboxysome content or the kinetics of photosynthesis with respect to inorganic carbon. These results are discussed in light of the apparent lack of photorespiration in these organisms.  相似文献   

18.
Accumulation of an intracellular pool of carbon (Ci pool) is one strategy by which marine algae overcome the low abundance of dissolved CO2 (CO2(aq)) in modern seawater. To identify the environmental conditions under which algae accumulate an acid‐labile Ci pool, we applied a 14C pulse‐chase method, used originally in dinoflagellates, to two new classes of algae, coccolithophorids and diatoms. This method measures the carbon accumulation inside the cells without altering the medium carbon chemistry or culture cell density. We found that the diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii [(Grunow) G. Fryxell & Hasle] and a calcifying strain of the coccolithophorid Emiliania huxleyi [(Lohmann) W. W. Hay & H. P. Mohler] develop significant acid‐labile Ci pools. Ci pools are measureable in cells cultured in media with 2–30 µmol l?1 CO2(aq), corresponding to a medium pH of 8.6–7.9. The absolute Ci pool was greater for the larger celled diatoms. For both algal classes, the Ci pool became a negligible contributor to photosynthesis once CO2(aq) exceeded 30 µmol l?1. Combining the 14C pulse‐chase method and 14C disequilibrium method enabled us to assess whether E. huxleyi and T. weissflogii exhibited thresholds for foregoing accumulation of DIC or reduced the reliance on bicarbonate uptake with increasing CO2(aq). We showed that the Ci pool decreases with higher CO2:HCO3? uptake rates.  相似文献   

19.
Over the last four decades, different hypotheses of Ca2+ and dissolved inorganic carbon transport to the intracellular site of calcite precipitation have been put forth for Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) Hay & Mohler. The objective of this study was to assess these hypotheses by means of mathematical models. It is shown that a vesicle‐based Ca2+ transport would require very high intravesicular Ca2+ concentrations, high vesicle fusion frequencies as well as a fast membrane recycling inside the cell. Furthermore, a kinetic model for the calcification compartment is presented that describes the internal chemical environment in terms of carbonate chemistry including calcite precipitation. Substrates for calcite precipitation are transported with different stoichiometries across the compartment membrane. As a result, the carbonate chemistry inside the compartment changes and hence influences the calcification rate. Moreover, the effect of carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity within the compartment is analyzed. One very promising model version is based on a Ca2+/H+ antiport, CO2 diffusion, and a CA inside the calcification compartment. Another promising model version is based on an import of Ca2+ and HCO3? and an export of H+.  相似文献   

20.
The utilization of inorganic carbon by three species of marine diatom, Skeletonema costatum (Grev.) Cleve. Ditylum brightwellii (West) Grun., and Chaetoceros calcitrans Paulsen was investigated using an inorganic carbon isotopic disequilibnum technique and inorganic carbon dose-response curves. Stable carbon isotope data of the diatoms are also presented. Observed rates of photosynthetic oxygen evolution were greater than could be accounted for by the theoretical rate of CO2 supply from the uncatalyzed dehydration of HCO3? in the external medium, suggesting use of HCO3? as an inorganic carbon source. Data from the isotopic disequilibrium experiment demonstrate the use of both HCO3? and CO2 for photosynthesis. Carbon isotope discrimination values support the use of HCO3? by the diatoms.  相似文献   

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