Macroalgal-mediated transfers of water column nitrogen to intertidal sediments and salt marsh plants |
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Authors: | Katharyn E. Boyer Peggy Fong |
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Affiliation: | Department of Organismic Biology, Ecology and Evolution, 621 Charles E. Young Drive, South, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095-1606, USA |
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Abstract: | In many temperate estuaries, mats of opportunistic macroalgae accumulate on intertidal flats and in lower elevations of salt marshes, perhaps playing a role in linking water column nitrogen (N) supply to these benthic habitats. Using a flow-through seawater system and tidal simulator, we varied densities (equivalent to 0, 1, 2, or 3 kg m−2 wet mass) of 15N-labelled macroalgae (Enteromorpha intestinalis) on estuarine sediments in microcosms with/without pickleweed (Salicornia virginica) to assess N transfers from algae. In the 6-week experiment, macroalgal biomass increased from initial levels in the lower density treatments but all algae lost N mass, probably through both leakage and decomposition. With all densities of algae added, sediments and pickleweed became enriched in 15N. With increasing mat density, losses of algal N mass increased, resulting in stepwise increases in 15N labeling of the deeper sediments and pickleweed. While we did not detect a growth response in pickleweed with macroalgal addition during the experiment, N losses from algal mats that persist over many months and/or recur each year could be important to the mineral nutrition of N-limited marsh plants. We conclude that N dynamics of intertidal sediments and lower salt marsh vegetation are linked to the N pools of co-occurring macroalgae and that further study is needed to assess the magnitude and importance of N transfers. |
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Keywords: | Enteromorpha N isotopes N limitation Salicornia Salt marsh |
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