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122 Local to Coastal-Scale Macrophyte Community Structure: Surprizing Patterns and Possible Mechanisms
Authors:Menge  B A  Allison  G  Freidenburg  T  Kavanaugh  M  Lubchenco  J  Nielsen  K  Schock  C  & Wood  S
Institution:Department of Marine Ecology, Göteborg University, Box 461, 405 30 Göteborg, Sweden
Abstract:Diatom blooms may be initiated by cells that have survived in the plankton or germinated resting stages from the sediments. However, it is not well understood how these different inocula contribute to bloom development. We followed diatom community development in twenty-liter microcosms given different inocula. Surface sediment and phytoplankton were collected in Gullmar Fjord, Sweden. Replicate microcosms were then dosed with local sediment and/or plankton and incubated in situ in Gullmar Fjord. We also followed the concurrent development of the phytoplankton community in the fjord. Experiments run in both spring and fall 2002 showed that bloom development in the microcosms was significantly faster when seeded by planktonic cells. However, addition of sediment may have stimulated planktonic growth and also provided additional propagules. The type of inoculum used strongly influenced the diatom composition in the microcosms. Sediment additions, through germination of resting stages, resulted in communities dominated by Detonula confervacea and Thalassiosira minima in spring, and Skeletonema costatum in fall. Planktonic inocula resulted in blooms of T. nordenskioeldii and Chaetoceros debilis in spring, and S. costatum and several Chaetoceros spp. in fall. Microcosms dosed with both plankton and sediment showed a mixed species assemblage. Comparisons between the microcosms and fjord phytoplankton suggest an important role for benthic seeding of diatom blooms.
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