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1.
Kinetics of cell death and the production of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) were investigated in Anabaena flos-aquae (Lyngb.) Bréb grown on three different N sources (N2nitrate, and ammonium) in a phosphorus (P)-limited chemostat. The fraction of live cells in the total population increased as growth rate increased with decreasing P limitation. Cell death was less in nitrate and ammonium media than in N2. The specific death rate (γ), when calculated as the slope ofv?1x vs. D?1, where vxand D are live cell fraction (or cell viability) and dilution rate, respectively, was 0. 0082 day?1 in N2and 0.0042 day?1 in nitrate. The slope of the plot in ammonium culture was not significant; however, the value of the live cell fraction was within the range for the NO?3culture. The fraction of live vegetative cells in N2 culture was constant at all growth rates and the increase in the overall live cell fraction with growth rate was due entirely to an increase in live heterocysts. Live heterocysts comprised 3.5% of the total cells at a growth rate of 0.25 day?1 and increased to 6.3% at 0.75 day?1 with the ratio of live heterocysts to live vegetative cells linearly increasing with growth rate. The fraction of live vegetative cells was invariant in nitrate cultures us in N2cultures. The live heterocysts fraction also increased with growth rate in nitrate cultures, along with the live heterocysts : live vegetative cells ratio, but the level was lower than in N2cultures. DOC released from dead cells increased inversely with growth rate in N2from 36.4% of the total DOC at a growth rate of 0.75 day?1 to 54.15% at 0.25 day?1. The contribution of cell death to the total DOC production in nitrate and ammonium media was significantly less than that under N2DOC from dead cells consisted mainly of high-molecular-weight compounds, whereas DOC excreted from live cells was largely of low molecular weight.  相似文献   

2.
The relative importance of respiration and organic carbon release to the efficiency of carbon specific growth of Skeletonema costatum (Grev.) Clave was evaluated over a light range from 1500–15 μE · m?2· s?1. Net growth efficiency ranged from 0.45–0.69 with a maximum at 130 μE · m?2· s?1. Respiration was 93% or more of the variations in growth efficiency. Organic carbon release ranged from 0–7% of gross production and increased with light intensity. Carbon specific particulate production was a hyperbolic function of incident light intensity and was related exponentially to particulate carbon production per unit chlorophyll a. Full sunlight conditions, 1500 μE · m?2· s?1, did not induce photoinhibition of gross production. Variations in the efficiency of growth of S. costatum were minimized over a wide range of light intensities mainly because of variations in cellular pigments which permitted the efficient utilization of available light energy, and a reduction in the losses of carbon which increases the growth rate, possibly as a consequence of the recycling of respired carbon within the cell.  相似文献   

3.
Dunaliella bardawil Ben-Amotz & Avron accumulates high concentrations of β-carotene when grown under high light intensity. The β-carotene is composed mainly of 9-cis and all-trans β-carotene. Accumulation of β-carotene and an increase in the ratio of the 9-cis to the all-trans isomer are strongly dependent on the light intensity under which the algae are cultivated but are independent of light quality within the photosynthetically active radiation range. Cells grown under continuous red (>645 nm) or white light of 500 W·m?2 reach a value of about 32 pg β-carotene·cell?1 and a ratio of 9-cis to all-trans β-carotene of around 2, whereas cells grown under low red or white light intensity of 25 W·m?2 contain about 3 pg·cell?1 and a ratio of isomers of around 0.3.  相似文献   

4.
Dunaliella tertiolecta Butcher was grown at two intensities (33, 150μEin · m?2· s?1) of blue light and white light at 0.25, 0.50 and 1.00 M NaCl. Growth rates were used as an indication of the relative osmoregulatory ability of cells in the various treatments. There was no significant effect on growth rate due to various NaCl molarities. No significant difference in growth rate was found between blue- and white-light cultures at the high intensity, the average growth constant being 2.07 divisions/day. However, at the low intensity illumination, blue light produced a significant increase in growth rate; 1.42 vs. 0.93 divisions/day for blue light and white light grown cells respectively. The average glycerol content of exponentially dividing cells grown at 0.25, 0.50 and 1.00 M NaCl was 0.12, 0.41 and 1.12 mg/108 cells, respectively, as measured by gas chromatography. The intracellular glycerol content was significantly reduced by blue light at both light intensities and at each NaCl molarity. However, high light intensity reduced cellular glycerol content more than the reduction effected by blue light. Glycerol accumulated in the medium throughout culture growth. Intracellular glycerol content also increased with cellular aging reaching 2.72 mg/108 cells in stationary phase, low intensity 1.00 M NaCl cultures. A negative correlation between glycerol content and growth rate was found. Total inhibition of glycerol production could not be obtained by treatment with blue light. However, this negative correlation possibly indicates that D. tertiolecta expends energy producing an excess amount of glycerol over that required for osmoregulation, leading to a reduction in the growth rate for the organism.  相似文献   

5.
Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin was maintained in exponential growth over a range of photon flux densities (PFD) from 7 to 230 μmol·m?2s?1. The chlorophyll a-specific light absorption coefficient, maximum quantum yield of photosynthesis, and C:N atom ratio were all independent of the PFD to which cells were acclimated. Carbon- and cell-specific, light-satuated, gross photosynthesis rates and dark respiration rates were largely independent of acclimation PFD. Decreases in the chlorophyll a-specific, gross photosynthesis rate and the carbon: chlorophyll ratio and increases of cell- or carbon-specific absorption coefficients were associated with an increase in cell chlorophyll a in cultures acclimated to low PFDs. The compensation PFD for growth was calculated to be 0.5 μmol·m?2s?1. The maintenance metabolic rate (2 × 10?7s?1), calculated on the basis of the compensation PFD, is an order of magnitude lower than the measured dark respiration rate(2.7 × 10?6mol O2·mol C?1s?1). Maintenance of high carbon-specific, light-saturated photosynthesis rates in cells acclimated to low PFDs may allow effective use of short exposures to high PFDs in a temporally variable light environment.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
8.
The growth and grazing characteristics of Poterioochromonas malhamensis (Pringsheim) Peterfi (= Ochromonas malhamensis Pringsheim) (ca. 8 μm) feeding on phytoplankton, including the cyanobacteria Synechococcus sp. (ca. 2 μm) and Microcystis viridis (A. Brown) Lemmermann (ca. 6 μm) and the green alga Chlorella pyrenoidosa Chick (ca. 13 μm), were investigated in laboratory experiments involving the following treatments: (1) light without added algal prey (autotrophy), (2) light with added algal prey (mixotrophy), and (3) dark with added algal prey (phagotrophy). There were significantly higher cell numbers under mixotrophic and phagotrophic growth than under autotrophic growth. With phytoplankton as food, growth rates under both mixotrophy and phagotrophy were about two or three times higher than those under autotrophy, indicating that the algal diets were readily able to support the population growth of P. malhamensis. There were no significant differences in growth rate between mixotrophic and phagotrophic cultures during exponential growth. The ingestion rate of P. malhamensis with algal prey was also similar under both continuous light and dark. Poterioochromonas malhamensis ingested on average 0.27 M. viridis cells·flagellate− 1 ·h− 1 and 0.18 C. pyrenoidosa cells·flagellate− 1 ·h− 1 in continuous light and 0.25 M. viridis cells·flagellate− 1 ·h− 1 and 0.18 C. pyrenoidosa cells·flagellate− 1 ·h− 1 in continuous dark during exponential growth. The results showed that light had no effect on the growth and ingestion rates of P. malhamensis for phagotrophy during exponential growth. However, phagotrophic populations of P. malhamensis were incapable of growth in continuous darkness for longer than 5 days. Populations of P. malhamensis showed no increase when prey was added again after 4 days in continuous darkness, indicating that light is necessary for sustained phagotrophic growth of P. malhamensis. The study suggests that P. malhamensis, which has strong tolerance for light, is light dependent for phagotrophy.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of diurnal variations in light intensity on the biomass characteristics and the efficiency of daily growth of Skeletonema costatum (Grev.) Cleve were evaluated. The relative importance of changes in carbon specific rates of respiration and organic release to the efficiency of growth was determined. Light intensity was either constant at 130 μE · m?2 · s?1 during the light period or fluctuated throughout the light period from 500 to 10 μE · m?2 · s?1 at rates of either 1 or 12 cycles · day?1. Total daily light was equivalent for all light regimes at 5.6 E · m?2 · day?1.Daily rates of growth remained comparable at ≈ 1 · day?1 under constant and fluctuating light regimes. Cell size as daily mean carbon · cell?1, nitrogen · cell?1 and cellular volume was decreased under diurnally varying light whereas daily mean chlorophyll a · cell?1 was unaffected.Rates of respiration, organic release and gross production were elevated several fold under diurnally varying light in comparison to constant light. Net growth efficiency decreased from 0.69 under constant light to values of 0.50 and 0.38 under 1 and 12 cycles · day?1, respectively. Decreased efficiency of growth under diurnally fluctuating light resulted mostly from greater respiratory activity while organic release remained < 10% of gross production. Increased rates of gross production reflected enhancement in the efficiency of carbon fixation with fluctuating light.  相似文献   

10.
Light intensity and temperature interactions have a complex effect on the physiological process rates of the filamentous bluegreen alga Anabaena variabilis Kütz. The optimum temperature for photosynthesis increased with increasing light intensity from 10°C at 42 μE·m?2·s?1 to 35°C at 562 μE·m?2·s?1. The light saturation parameter, IK, increased with increasing temperatures. The maximum photosynthetic rate (2.0 g C·g dry wt.?1·d?1) occurred at 35°C and 564 μE·m?2·s?1. At 15°C, the maximum rate was 1.25 g C·g dry wt.?1·d?1 at 332 μE·m?2·s?1. The dark respiration rate increased exponentially with temperature. Under favorable conditions of light intensity and temperature the percent of extracellular release of dissolved organic carbon was less than 5% of the total C fixed. This release increased to nearly 40% under combinations of low light intensity and high temperature. A mathematical model was developed to simulate the interaction of light intensity and temperature on photosynthetic rate. The interactive effects were represented by making the light-saturation parameters a function of temperature.  相似文献   

11.
Efficient light to biomass conversion in photobioreactors is crucial for economically feasible microalgae production processes. It has been suggested that photosynthesis is enhanced in short light path photobioreactors by mixing‐induced flashing light regimes. In this study, photosynthetic efficiency and growth of the green microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii were measured using LED light to simulate light/dark cycles ranging from 5 to 100 Hz at a light‐dark ratio of 0.1 and a flash intensity of 1000 µmol m−2 s−1. Light flashing at 100 Hz yielded the same photosynthetic efficiency and specific growth rate as cultivation under continuous illumination with the same time‐averaged light intensity (i.e., 100 µmol m−2 s−1). The efficiency and growth rate decreased with decreasing flash frequency. Even at 5 Hz flashing, the rate of linear electron transport during the flash was still 2.5 times higher than during maximal growth under continuous light, suggesting storage of reducing equivalents during the flash which are available during the dark period. In this way the dark reaction of photosynthesis can continue during the dark time of a light/dark cycle. Understanding photosynthetic growth in dynamic light regimes is crucial for model development to predict microalgal photobioreactor productivities. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2011;108: 2905–2913. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of this study was to determine the optimal physical process conditions for the cultivation of locally isolated strains of Nannochloropsis sp. and Tetraselmis striata to achieve maximum growth rate. It was essential to evaluate biomass production at different agitation rates, light intensities, and temperature levels. Central composite design and response surface methodology were applied to design the experiments and optimize the cultivation process for Nannochloropsis sp. and T. striata. The specific growth rate of 0.250 d?1 was obtained for Nannochloropsis sp. cells under the light intensity of 54 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1, at the agitation rate of 151 rpm in 24.5°C. The optimal physical process conditions for T. striata were obtained under the light intensity of 56 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1 in 25.5°C at the agitation rate of 151 rpm in 25.5°C, resulting in a specific growth rate of 0.226 d?1. The predicted values were justified by the verification tests. Good agreement between the predicted values and the experimental values confirmed the validity of the models for the cultivation of microalgal strains. In this article, the noteworthy result was that temperature was a dominant factor in obtaining high chl‐a content for Nannochloropsis sp., whereas the growth of T. striata strongly depended on light exposure.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Small single‐celled Chaetoceros sp. are often widely distributed, but frequently overlooked. An estuarine diatom with an extremely high growth potential under optimal conditions was isolated from the Shinkawa‐Kasugagawa estuary in the eastern part of the Seto Inland Sea, western Japan. It was identified as Chaetoceros salsugineum based on morphological observations. This strain had a specific growth rate of 0.54 h?1 at 30°C under 700 μmol · m?2 · s?1 (about 30% of natural maximal summer light) with a 14:10 L:D cycle; there was little growth in the dark. However, under continuous light it grew at only 0.35 h?1 or a daily specific growth rate of 8.4 d?1. In addition, cell density, chlorophyll a, and particulate organic carbon concentrations increased by about 1000 times in 24 h at 30°C under 700 μmol · m?2 · s?1 with a 14:10 L:D cycle, showing a growth rate of close to 7 d?1. This very rapid growth rate may be the result of adaptation to this estuarine environment with high light and temperature. Thus, C. salsugineum can be an important primary producer in this estuary in summer and also an important organism for further physiological and genetic research.  相似文献   

15.
In photobioreactors and natural systems, microalgae are subjected to rapidly changing light intensities (LI) due to light attenuation and mixing. A controlled way to study the effect of rapidly changing LI is to subject cultures to flashing light. In this study, series of flashing-light experiments were conducted using Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 with constant overall average LI of approximately 84 μmol·m−2·s−1 and relative times in the light and dark varied. The results were also compared with simulated results using a mathematical model including an absorbed pool of light energy, photoacclimation, and photoinhibition. With equal time in light and dark, the specific growth rate (μ) systematically decreased with increasing light duration, and µ decreased further when the ratio of light to dark was decreased. The model captured both trends with the mechanistic explanation that when the light duration was very short the changes in the pool of absorbed LI were smoothed out across the light and dark periods, whereas longer durations caused the biomass to experience discrete light and dark conditions that lead to reduced light absorption, more energy loss to nonphotochemical quenching, and more photodamage. These growth effects were accentuated as the ratio of light to dark decreased.  相似文献   

16.
Preadapted cultures were grown in a 12:12 LD cycle at a series of light intensities under cool-white, fluorescent lamps. Pyrocystis fusiformis Murray maintained high division rates at low light intensities at the expense of cell size. In contrast, Dissodinium lunula (Schuett) Taylor had relatively lower division rates at low light intensities with little concomitant decrease in size. The response of P. noctiluca Murray was intermediate between these two species. For all three, cell numbers did not increase above an intensity of 5–10 μEin·m?2·sec?1 and division rate was saturated at ca. 30, 60, and 60μEin·m?2·sec?1 for P. fusiformis, P. noctiluca, and D. lunula, respectively. The capacity for stimulable bioluminescence was saturated at light intensities of 0.15 μEin·m?2·day in short-term (2-day) experiments. In cultures of P. fusiformis and P. noctiluca, maintained for at least one month at lower intensities than needed to saturate division rate, a decrease in the capacity for stimulable bioluminescence was accompanied by a reduction in cell size. Our results suggest that cell size and bioluminescent capacity may prove to be a potentially useful indication of the history of exposure of natural populations of Pyrocystis spp. to ambient intensities.  相似文献   

17.
The optimal photon fluence rate for growth of tha llus tips of Gracilaria sp. was low (about 100 μE·–2·1); higher photon fluence rates inhibited growth. Both phycoerythrin (PE) and chlorophyll (chl) contents decreased with increasing photon fluence rates (up to 100 μE·–m–2s–1) in a fashion inverse to the growth response. Chl/PE ratios varied directly as the growth response over a larger photon fluence rate range. The peak chl/PE ratios were obtained at a photon fluence rate optimal for growth, suggesting that this parameter may be used to estimate in situ growth rates. A low compensation point (about 7 μE·–2s–1) was observed for low light (15 μE·–2s–1) grown plants. This compensation point was also obtained for growth in the long–term (5–6 weeks) experiments. Plants grown at 60 and 140 μE·–2s–1 showed higher light compensation and saturation points, suggesting that the variations in pigment composition found between the different treatments determine the photosynthetic responses at sub–optimal photon fluence rates. Photosynthetic rates at light saturation were the same, on a biomass basis, for plants grown at the various photon fluence rates. Thus, the photosynthetic dark reactions were not influenced by previous light regimes. It is suggested that maximal photosynthetic rates expressed on a biomass basis better reflect the potential productivity at tight saturation than if expressed on a pigment basis. Gracilaria sp. grew better under non–filtered fluorescent and greenish than under reddish and blue–enriched light of equal and sub–optimal photon, fluence rate. However, the pigment relations of the algae did not change in a direction complementary to the light composition at which they grew. This, together with the relatively higher photosynthetic rates under reddish and blueish light for plants previously grown under reddish and blueish light, suggests that adaptations to variouslight spectra are based on mechanisms different from complementary chromatic adaptation of the pigments.  相似文献   

18.
Specific growth rate of Cryptomonas ovata var. palustris Pringsheim was measured in batch culture at 14 light-temperature combinations. Both the maximum growth rate (μm) and optimum light intensity (Iopt) fit an empirical function that increases exponentially with temperature up to an optimum (Topt), then declines rapidly as temperature exceeds Topt. Incorporation of these functions into Steele's growth equation gives a good estimate of specific growth rate over a wide range of temperature and light intensity. Rates of phosphate, ammonium and nitrate uptake were measured separately at 16 combinations of irradiance and temperature and following a spike addition of all starved cells initially took up nutrient at a rapid rate. This transitory surge was followed by a period of steady, substrate-saturated uptake that persisted until external nutrient concentration fell. Substrate-saturated NO3?-uptake proceeded at very slow rates in the dark and was stimulated by both increased temperature and irradiance; NH4+-uptake apparently proceeded at a basal rate at 8 and l4 C and was also stimulated by increased temperature and irradiance. Rates of NH4?-uptake were much higher than NO3?-uptake at all light-temperature combinations. Below 20 C, PO4?3-uptake was more rapid in dark than in light, but was light enhanced at 26 C.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
The influence of irradiance, photoperiod and temperature was determined for the growth kinetics of the diatoms Aulacoseira subarctica, Stephanodiscus astraea and Stephanodiscus hantzschii and the results compared with those of cyanobacteria. Irradiance and photoperiod relationships were qualitatively similar to those for cyanobacteria in that: (1) growth rate (K) was proportionally greater under short photoperiods, with ratios of K under continuous light to K under 3:21 light:dark (LD) cycles of 1·50, 1·80 and 2·96 for A. subarctica, S. astraea and S. hantzschii respectively; (2) at subsaturating irradiances, K was proportional to irradiance and independent of temperature with a negligible predicted maintenance growth rate requirement. Apparent growth efficiencies (GE) at subsaturating irradiances were 0·26±0·03, 0·42±0·03 and 0·50±0·03 divisions mol-1m2 for A. subarctica, S. astraea and S. hantzschii with the values for Stephanodiscus species comparable to values for Oscillatoria species. Under a 3:21 LD cycle at 4 °C, light-saturated growth rates were 0·066±0·004, 0·197±0·033 and 0·285±0·018 divisions day-1 for A. subarctica, S. astraea and S. hantzschii. S. hantzschii growth rate at 4 °C exceeded maximum Oscillatoria growth rates at 23 °C and the S. astraea growth rate at 4 °C was equivalent to O. agardhii growth rate at 20 °C. Temperature increases above 4 °C gave Q10 values between 4 °C and 12 °C of 3·68, 2·39 and 1·92 for A. subarctica, S. astraea and S. hantzschii, but higher temperatures resulted in minor increases in K. S. astraea growth rate peaked at 16 °C, declining sharply at higher temperatures. February to March in situ growth rates in Lough Neagh, mean temperature 4·3 °C, showed that the A. subarctica in situ K of 0·058 divisions day-1 was close to the laboratory K at 4 °C, but that S. astraea in situ K of 0·101 divisions day-1 was lower than the laboratory K at 4 °C.  相似文献   

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