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1.
Three cultured species of Pyrocystis (Dinoccoccales) reproduced asexually by forming 2 (or 1) aplanospores or zoospores inside the parent cell wall. In all 3 species these small reproductive cells, although they may not resemble the parent cells, swell up rapidly (~ 10 min) to the approximate size and shape of the parent cell. These swollen cells become new vegetative cells. The above asexual process is the only way by which cells numbers increase in our cultures. Pyrocystis lunula was propagated at the lunula stage of the life cycle. The nonmotile crescent-shaped cells produced reproductive cells that were Gymnodinium-shaped and had, in some cases, a trailing flagellum. With P. fusiformis and P. noctiluca, the reproductive cells were not flagellated. With P. fusiformis, these bodies had a pronounced equatorial constriction like a girdle, while in P. noctiluca the “girdle” was an inconspicuous feature if present. With P. noctiluca and P. fusiformis on a 12:12 ld cycle, reproductive cells were formed early in the dark period and they swelled up at the beginning of the light period. Reproduction of P. lunula was not well phased in our experiments, with reproductive cells developing at the end of the light period and the end of the dark period.  相似文献   

2.
Ceratium fusus (Ehrenb.) Dujardin was exposed to light of different wavelengths and photon flux densities (PFDs) to examine their effects on mechanically stimulable bioluminescence (MSL). Photoinhibition of MSL was proportional to the logarithm of PFD. Exposure to I μmol photons·m?2s?1 of broadband blue light (ca. 400–500 nm) produced near-complete photoinhibition (≥90% reduction in MSL) with a threshold at ca. 0.01 μmol photons·m?2·s?1. The threshold of photoinhibition was ca. an order of magnitude greater for both broadband green (ca. 500–580 nm) and red light (ca. 660–700 nm). Exposure to narrow spectral bands (ca. 10 nm half bandwidth) from 400 and 700 nm at a PFD of 0.1 μmol photons·m?2·s?1 produced a maximal response of photoinhibition in the blue wavelengths (peak ca. 490 nm). A photoinhibition response (≥ 10%) in the green (ca. 500–540 nm) and red wavelengths (ca. 680 nm) occurred only at higher PFDs (1 and 10 μmol photons·m?2·s?1). The spectral response is similar to that reported for Gonyaulax polyedra Stein and Pyrocystis lunula Schütt and unlike that of Alexandrium tamarense (Lebour) Balech et Tangen. The dinoflagellate's own bioluminescence is two orders of magnitude too low to result in self-photoinhibition. The quantitative relationships developed in the laboratory predict photoinhibition of bioluminescence in populations of C. fusus in the North Atlantic Ocean.  相似文献   

3.
Continuous cultures of Merismopedia tenuissima Lemmerman, limited by phosphorus, nitrogen, sulfur, or carbon, were compared to non limited batch cultures by two methods. The cellular content of photosynthetic pigments (chlorophyll and phycocyanin) was found to decrease in all nutrient limited cultures, except for the carbon limited culture. The ratio of carbohydrate to protein was 4- to 7-fold higher in P, N or S limited cultures than in non-limited or C limited cultures. The macromolecular products of photosynthesis were determined in samples to which NaH14CO3 was added. Relative incorporation into protein decreased in P or N limited cultures, increased accumulation of low molecular weight compounds was found in S and P limited cultures, and little change was noted in C limited cultures as compared to non-limited cultures. Although relative incorporation into protein was significantly greater at 20μEin·m?2·s?1 light intensity than at 180 μEin·m?2.s?1 in non-limited cultures, this effect was abolished in all nutrient limited cultures. These results suggest that measurement of the cellular carbohydrate to protein ratio and the products of photosynthesis would be useful in the analysis of algal population dynamics in nature.  相似文献   

4.
Photoinhibition of mechanically stimulable bioluminescence (MSL) in the heterotrophic dinoflagellate Protoperidinium depressum Bailey was investigated using samples collected from the Massachusetts and southern Texas coasts. The times for both photoinhibition of MSL (ca. 10 min) and dark recovery from photoinhibition of MSL (ca. 45 min) in this species were similar to those reported for autotrophic dinoflagellates. The degree of photoinhibition of MSL was a linear function of the logarithm of photon flux density (PFD). The threshold PFDs for the photoinhibition of MSL were 0.02, 0.6, and 21 μmol photons · m?2· s?1 for broad-band blue, green, and red light, respectively. These PFDs are lower than those required for photoinhibition of MSL by the autotrophic dinoflagellates Pyrocystis lunula and Ceratium fusus. We speculate that photosynthetic pigments in autotrophic dinoflagellates shield the photoreceptor that causes photoinhibition of MSL, thus lowering the sensitivity of these dinoflagellates to light. When field-collected P. depressum were kept in the laboratory without growth for a week, photoinhibition of MSL's sensitivity to light increased progressively along with 1) a decrease in its bioluminescence capacity (BCAP), 2) a decrease in the ratio of MSL to BCAP (MSL/BCAP), and 3) a decrease in the orange pigmentation (probably carotenoid) of the dinoflagellate. The action spectrum for photoinhibition of MSL in P. depressum was characterized primarily with a broad peak in the blue extending into the green. We suggest that carotenoid was not a photoreceptor for the photoinhibition of MSL in P. depressum because the peak of the action spectrum was too broad and extended too far into the green part of the spectrum, and because the orange pigment present decreased as photoinhibition of MSL became more sensitive to light.  相似文献   

5.
In the unicellular algae Pyrocystis lunula Schütt and Gonyaulax polyedra Stein, bioluminescence and its circadian regulation are similar in several respects, but there are also several important differences. As in G. polyedra, P. lunula emits light both as bright flashes and as a low intensity glow. At 20° C, the individual flashes are considerably brighter than in G. polyedra, and their durations are typically less than 500 ms. Both species show a circadian rhythm in the frequency of spontaneous flashes, which peaks in the night-phase under light–dark cycles and continues in both continuous light and dark. However, compared to G. polyedra, the circadian system in P. lunula is more sensitive to light: 10 min exposures (500 μmol · m–2· s–1 white light) can shift the phase of the rhythm by more than 8 h, and rhythmicity is completely suppressed at an irradiance above 20 μmol · m–2· s–1, where the G. polyedra rhythym persists for weeks. Like G. polyedra, period length increases with increasing irradiance of continuous red light but decreases with increasing intensity of continuous blue light. The glow in P. lunula differs markedly from that in G. polyedra in that it occurs at about the same intensity at all times during the circadian cycle; thus, it is not under circadian control but may fluctuate 5–10-fold in intensity within a time frame of seconds. This suggests that the glow may differ in its physiological basis in the two organisms. The results also indicate that the circadian regulation of luciferase activity differs in the two species. In G. polyedra, the organelle responsible for bioluminescence and luciferase is lost and then reformed on a daily basis; in P. lunula, the luciferase is conserved and localized elsewhere during the nonbioluminescent phase of the cycle.  相似文献   

6.
Field observations and results from previous laboratory studies on the effects of turbulence on dinoflagellates have led to a paradigm in phytoplankton ecology that dinoflagellate growth is negatively affected by turbulence. To test the paradigm, 10 species of autotrophic dinoflagellates were exposed to quantified three‐dimensional turbulence generated by vertically oscillating cylindrical rods in 20‐L rectangular culture tanks. Turbulence was quantified in the tanks (as the turbulent energy dissipation rate, ε ) using an acoustic Doppler velocimeter. Dinoflagellates were exposed to two turbulence treatments: high turbulence ( ε ~ 10 ? 4 m2·s ? 3), low turbulence ( ε ~ 10 ? 8 m2·s ? 3), and an unstirred control. In accord with the paradigm, Ceratium fusus (Ehrenberg) Dujardin had lower net growth rates in high turbulence, whereas Pyrocystis noctiluca Murray ex Haeckel and Ceratium tripos (O. F. Müller) Nitzsch did not increase their numbers in high turbulence. However, Alexandrium tamarense (Lebour) Balech, Pyrocystis fusiformis Wyville‐Thomson ex Murray, Alexandrium catenella (Whedon and Kofoid) Balech, and a Gyrodinium sp. Kofoid and Swezy were apparently unaffected by turbulence and had the same net growth rates across all turbulence treatments. Contradicting the paradigm, Lingulodinium polyedrum (Stein) Dodge (= Gonyaulax polyedra), Gymnodinium catenatum Graham, and Alexandrium fundyense Balech had increased net growth rates in high turbulence treatments. Cross‐sectional area (CSA) varied little across turbulence treatments for 8 of 10 dinoflagellate species tested, CSA in C. fusus increased when net growth rate decreased in high turbulence, and, conversely, CSA decreased in L. polyedrum when net growth rate increased in high turbulence.  相似文献   

7.
P. bahamense, G. polyedra, and P. lunula exhibit interspecies differences in stimulable and spontaneous bioluminescence. For each species the total number of photons that can be emitted upon mechanical stimulation is a constant, regardless of the time during scotophase at which stimulation occurs. Ratios of stimulable bioluminescence per organism during scotophase and photophase are as high as 950:1 for laboratory cultures and have been observed as high as 4000: 1 for natural populations of P. bahamense. Spontaneous emission in darkness shows flashing as well as low-level continuous emission. Natural populations of P. bahamense, placed in darkness during natural photophase, exhibit a dual character to their stimulable bioluminescence. Mechanical stimulation techniques are described for rapid and reproducible stimulation of bioluminescence.  相似文献   

8.
Phosphate uptake by P-replete and P-depleted Pyrocystis noctiluca (Murray) Schütt grown at different ambient N:P ratios was multiphasic between 0.1 and 100 μM PO43-. Within each of the kinetic phases, the saturated uptake rate (Vmax), but not the half saturation constant (Km) was affected by the cellular-P status and light. Uptake rates in the dark were ca. 50% of that in the light and respiratory activity accounted for the observed basal uptake. The combination of multiphasic uptake, and the uncoupling of short term transient uptake from growth resulting in maximum specific uptake rates of 50 h?1 may help explain the abundance of P. noctiluca in oligotrophic regions.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanically stimulable bioluminescence of members of the Gonyaulax catenella group can be maximally photoinhibited by exposure to as few as 1013 quanta/cm2, a factor 104 times smaller than that required for comparable photoinhibition in Gonyaulax polyedra and all other photosynthetic bioluminescent dinoflagellates investigated. Following an irradiation pulse there is an initial time lag of one minute, followed by a rapid decrease in mechanical stimulability to approximately 1% of the dark unirradiated control with a firstorder rate constant as high as 0.01 sec?1. Action spectra for all three species imply a pigment with a single absorption band having a maximum at 562 nm and a half band width of 105 nm within the spectral range 325 nm to 775 nm. Photoinhibition appears to decrease either the sensitivity of the shear receptor mechanism or the efficiency of signal transmission in the dinoflagellates, since chemically stimulable bioluminescence is unaffected by these exposures.  相似文献   

10.
Growing algae to scrub nutrients from manure presents an alternative to the current practice of land application and provides utilizable algal biomass as an end product. The objective of this study was to assess algal growth, nutrient removal, and nitrification using higher light intensities and manure loading rates than in the previous experiments. Algal turfs, with periphyton mainly composed of green algal species, were grown under two light regimes (270 and 390 μmol photons·m?2· s?1) and anaerobically digested flushed dairy manure wastewater (ADFDMW) loading rates ranging from 0.8 to 3.7 g total N and 0.12 to 0.58 g total P·m?2·d?1. Filamentous cyanobacteria (Oscillatoria spp.) and diatoms (Navicula, Nitzschia, and Cyclotella sp.) partially replaced the filamentous green algae at relatively high ADFDMW loading rates and more prominently under low incident light. Mean algal production increased with loading rate and irradiance from 7.6±2.71 to 19.1±2.73 g dry weight· m?2·d?1. The N and P content of algal biomass generally increased with loading rate and ranged from 2.9%–7.3% and 0.5%–1.3% (by weight), respectively. Carbon content remained relatively constant at all loading rates (42%–47%). The maximum removal rates of N and P per unit algal biomass were 70 and 13 mg·g?1 dry weight·m?2·d?1, respectively. Recovery of nutrients in harvested algal biomass accounted for about 31%–52% for N and 30%–59% for P. Recovery of P appeared to be uncoupled with N at higher loading rates, suggesting that algal potential for accumulation of P may have already been saturated. It appears that higher irradiance level enhancing algal growth was the overriding factor in controlling nitrification in the algal turf scrubber units.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of light intensity (PAR) on the nitrogenase activity of Mastigocladus laminosus Cohn was studied by the acetylene reduction technique. Benthic mat from a thermal stream, Hot River, in Yellowstone National Park was used in both experimental and in situ incubations. This hot spring maintained a mean pH of 7.0, was essentially isothermal (ca. 50°C), and had virtually no upstream to downstream physicochemical gradients (P > 0.05). Two surveys of the stream showed that nitrogenase of the M. laminosus mat was significantly more active (P > 0.02) under low light intensities than under high intensities, 252 and 712 μE · m?2· s?1, respectively. Maximum activity of Hot River Mastigocladus (268 nmol C2H4· mg Chl a?1· h?1) occurred at 50% full midday light intensities; the rates at low light (mean = 247 nmol C2H4· mg Chl a?1· h?1) were significantly (P > 0.001) greater than those at high light (mean = 106). The results indicate that M. laminosus nitrogenase activity is low light adapted and suggest that the temporal pattern for nitrogen fixation might be significantly different from that of thermophilic Calothrix.  相似文献   

12.
We have examined aspects of the bioluminescence of 5 clones of Dissodinium, 1 clone of Pyrocystis acuta, 4 clones of Pyrocystis fusiformis, and 5 clones of Pyrocystis noctiluca. All clones produced the same color bioluminescence with an intensity peak near 474 nm. The in vivo emission spectra of these clones agreed with those previously determined, for 4 other species of marine dinoflagellates. The amount of light emitted by the dinoflagellates in scotophase when mechanically stimulated to exhaustion was determined for most of the clones. The largest species, P. noctiluca and P. fusiformis, emitted 37–89 × 109 photons cell?1 and 23–62 × 109 photons cell?1, respectively, about a thousand, times as much light as Gonyaulax species. Pyrocystis acuta emitted 3–6 × 109 photons cell?1. Three of the 5 clones of Dissodinium were bioluminescent. The range for 3 clones was 5–13 × 109 photons cell?1. All 5 clones of Dissodinium are morphologically distinct. Both the clones of Dissodinium and Pyrocystis produced much higher numbers of photons per cell nitrogen (ca. 7–50 times) than Gonyaulax polyedra or Pyrodinium bahamense. The data suggested that enzyme turnover occurred in the reactions producing light during mechanical stimulation of Dissodinium and Pyrocystis species.  相似文献   

13.
A CO2 concentrating mechanism has been identified in the phycoerythrin-possessing Synechococcus sp. WH7803 and has been observed to be severely inhibited by short exposure to elevated light intensities. A light treatment of 300–2000 μmol quanta·m?2·s?1 resulted in a considerable decay in the variable fluorescence of PSII with time, suggesting decreased efficiency of energy transfer from the phycobilisomes, direct damage to the reaction center II, or both. Measurements of the activity of PSII and changes in fluorescence emission spectra during a light treatment of 1000 μmol quanta·m?2·s?1 indicated considerable reduction in the energy flow from the phycocyanin to the phycobilisome terminal acceptor and chlorophyll a. Consequently, whereas the maximal photosynthetic rate, at saturating light and Co2 concentration, was hardly affected by a light treatment of 1000 μmol quanta·m?2·s?1 for 2 h, the light intensity required to reach that maximum increased with the duration of the light treatment.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Cryptomonas erosa Skuja, a planktonic alga, was grown in batch culture at different combinations of light intensity and temperature, under nutrient saturation. Growth was maximal (1.2 divisions · day?1) at 23.5 C and 0.043 ly · min?1, declining sharply with temperature (0.025 divisions-day?1 at 1 C). With decreasing temperature, the cells showed both light saturation and inhibition at much reduced light intensities. At the same time the compensation light intensity for growth declined towards a minimum of slightly above 0.4 × 10?4 ly · min?1 (~1 ft-c) at 1 C or <0.1 ly · day?1 (PAR). Cell division was more adversely affected by low temperature than carbon uptake, and the resulting excess production of photosynthate was both stored and excreted. Extreme storage of carbohydrates resulted in cell volumes and carbon content ca. 22 and 30 × greater, respectively, than the maxima observed for cells incubated in the dark, whereas, at growth inhibitory light levels, as much as 57% of the total assimilated carbon was excreted. A marked increase in cell pigment was observed at the lowest light levels (<10?3 ly · min?1), at high temperature. The growth response of C. erosa in culture provides insight into the abundance and distribution of cryptomonads and other small algal flagellates in nature.  相似文献   

16.
Ethmodiscus rex (Rattray) Wiseman and Hendey cells from near surface net tows in the Southwest Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea were examined for chemical composition, internal nutrient pool concentrations, and oxygen evolution characteristics. Elemental ratios indicated nitrogen limitation with C:N:P ratios of 125:9:1 (atoms), and carbon: chlorophyll (chl) ratios of 129:1 (weight). However, internal nitrate pools (1.4–27.1 mM) suggested that cells were not N-limited. Intracellular NO3? accounted for up to 54% (range = 3–54%) of the total N quota in some samples. Photosynthetic parameters were consistent with a high-light-adapted population and suggested an instantaneous maximum chl-specific photosynthetic rate (PBmax) of 4.8–12.4 nmol O2·μg chl?1· h?1. Respiration rates varied ten-fold and were inversely related to PBmax Ethmodiscus chemical composition and buoyancy characteristics are similar to vertically migrating Rhizosolenia mats and the non-motile dinoflagellate Pyrocystis noctiluca Murray (Schuett). The presence of internal NO3? pools in Ethmodiscus suggests that this genus is also vertically migrating to exploit sub-surface nitrogen pools. Such behavior may be widespread in large, non-motile oceanic phytoplankton. Based on ascent rate data, chemical composition, and photosynthetic rates, we estimate that the entire division–migration cycle for Ethmodiscus requires at least 7–12 days.  相似文献   

17.
Optimum light, temperature, and pH conditions for growth, photosynthetic, and respiratory activities of Peridinium cinctum fa. westii (Lemm.) Lef were investigated by using axenic clones in batch cultures. The results are discussed and compared with data from Lake Kinneret (Israel) where it produces heavy blooms in spring. Highest biomass development and growth rates occurred at ca. 23° C and ≥50 μE· m?2·s1 of fluorescent light with energy peaks at 440–575 and 665 nm. Photosynthetic oxygen release was more efficient in filtered light of blue (BG 12) and red (RG 2) than in green (VG 9) qualities. Photosynthetic oxygen production occurred at temperatures ranging from 5° to 32° C in white fluorescent light from 10 to 105 μE·m?2·s?1 with a gross maximum value of 1500 × 10?12 g·cell?1·h?1 at the highest irradiance. The average respiration amounted to ca. 12% of the gross production and reached a maximum value of ca. 270·10?12 g·cell?1·h?1 at 31° C. A comparison of photosynthetic and respiratory Q10-values showed that in the upper temperature range the increase in gross production was only a third of the corresponding increase in respiration, although the gross production was at maximum. Short intermittent periods of dark (>7 min) before high light exposures from a halogen lamp greatly increased oxygen production. Depending on the physiological status of the alga, light saturation values were reached at 500–1000 μE·m?2·s?1 of halogen light with compensation points at 20–40 μE·m?2·s?1 and Ik-values at 100–200 μE·m?2·s?1. The corresponding values in fluorescent light in which it was cultured and adapted, were 25 to 75% lower indicating the ability of the alga to efficiently utilize varying light conditions, if the adaptation time is sufficient. Carbon fixation was most efficient at ca. pH 7, but the growth rates and biomass development were highest at pH 8.3.  相似文献   

18.
Growth and pigment concentrations of the, estuarine dinoflagellate, Prorocentrum mariae-lebouriae (Parke and Ballantine) comb. nov., were measured in cultures grown in white, blue, green and red radiation at three different irradiances. White irradiances (400–800 nm) were 13.4, 4.0 and 1.8 W · m?2 with photon flux densities of 58.7 ± 3.5, 17.4 ± 0.6 and 7.8 ± 0.3 μM quanta · m?2· s?1, respectively. All other spectral qualities had the same photon flux densities. Concentrations of chlorophyll a and chlorophyll c were inversely related to irradiance. A decrease of 7- to 8-fold in photon flux density resulted in a 2-fold increase in chlorophyll a and c and a 1.6- to 2.4-fold increase in both peridinin and total carotenoid concentrations. Cells grown in green light contained 22 to 32% more peridinin per cell and exhibited 10 to 16% higher peridinin to chlorophyll a ratios than cells grown in white light. Growth decreased as a function of irradiance in white, green and red light grown cells but was the same at all blue light irradiances. Maximum growth rates occurred at 8 μM quanta · m?2· s?1 in blue light, while in red and white light maximum growth rates occurred at considerably higher photon flux densities (24 to 32 μM quanta · m?2· s?1). The fastest growth rates occurred in blue and red radiation. White radiation producing maximum growth was only as effective as red and blue light when the photon flux density in either the red or blue portion of the white light spectrum was equivalent to that of a red or of blue light treatment which produced maximum growth rates. These differences in growth and pigmentation indicate that P. mariae-lebouriae responds to the spectral quality under which it is grown.  相似文献   

19.
The large dinoflagellate, Pyrocystis fusiformis Murray, emits biolumtnescence on stimulation with dilute acid. The bioluminescence can be seen in the light microscope to originate in a spherical region just distal to the nucleus during the day and appears as a persistent glow which can be localized in an orange-brown sphere. At night, the bioluminescence, in response to stimulation, is a bright flash from microsources scattered throughout the cytoplasm. The orange sphere can no longer be seen nor does a bioluminescent glow originate from this central region on stimulation. This difference in the position of intracellular bioluminescence between day and night has allowed the identification in electron micrographs of structures which correspond to the source of bioluminescence during the day. Light is emitted from a spherical mass of vesicles which contain electron-dense short rods with rounded ends, sometimes crossed by electron-transparent narrow bands. At night, these vesicles can be recognized in the peripheral cytoplasm. It is proposed that these vesicles are the structural counterparts of the microsources of bioluminescence in P. fusiformis.  相似文献   

20.
Pyrocystis lunula Schütt is a unicellular photoautotrophic dinoflagellate, commonly found in marine environments, displaying circadian‐controlled bioluminescence. Because of this species' characteristics, effects of pollutants on bioluminescence in P. lunula may make for an easy and simple bioassay that would be valuable for toxicity testing and the protection of coastal resources. This study therefore investigated the short‐term effects of metals and organic pollutants on the recovery of the bioluminescent potential in P. lunula. Recovery of bioluminescence was strongly inhibited in a dose‐dependent manner by all reference contaminants tested, the system being most sensitive to copper and cadmium (4‐h IC50s 0.96 and 1.18 μM, respectively), followed by phenanthrene, lead, SDS, and nickel (4‐h IC50s 1.64, 12.8, 15.6, and 73.1 μM, respectively), whereas relatively high concentrations of phenol were needed to elicit a response (4‐h IC50 1.64 mM). Except for exposure to lead and nickel, the inhibitory effects of cadmium, copper, and all organic pollutants were reversible, with P. lunula recovering 80%–100% of its bioluminescence potential after a period of 72 h in uncontaminated medium. Our results show that the restoration of bioluminescence in P. lunula is sensitive to the reference contaminants tested and obtains highly reproducible results.  相似文献   

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