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1.
Ammonium and nitrate uptake rates in the macroalgae Ulva fenestrata (Postels and Ruprecht) (Chlorophyta) and Gracilaria pacifica (Abbott) (Rhodophyta) were determined by 15N accumulation in algal tissue and by disappearance of nutrient from the medium in long‐term (4–13 days) incubations. Nitrogen‐rich algae (total nitrogen> 4% dry weight [dw]) were used to detect isotope dilution by release of inorganic unlabeled N from algal thalli. Uptake of NH4 + was similar for the two macroalgae, and the highest rates were observed on the first day of incubation (45 μmol N·g dw ? 1·h ? 1 in U. fenestrata and 32 μmol N·g dw ? 1·h ? 1 in G. pacifica). A significant isotope dilution (from 10 to 7.9 atom % enrichment) occurred in U. fenestrata cultures during the first day, corresponding to a NH4 + release rate of 11 μmol N·g dw ? 1·h ? 1. Little isotope dilution occurred in the other algal cultures. Concurrently to net NH4 + uptake, we observed a transient free amino acid (FAA) release on the first day in both macroalgal cultures. The uptake rates estimated by NH4 + disappearance and 15N incorporation in algal tissue compare well (82% agreement, defined as the percentage ratio of the lower to the higher rate) at high NH4 + concentrations, provided that isotope dilution is taken into account. On average, 96% of added 15NH4 + was recovered from the medium and algal tissue at the end of the incubation. Negligible uptake of NO3 ? was observed during the first 2–3 days in both macroalgae. The lag of uptake may have resulted from the need for either some N deprivation (use of NO3 ? pools) or physiological/metabolic changes required before the uptake of NO3 ? . During the subsequent days, NO3 ? uptake rates were similar for the two macroalgae but much lower than NH4 + uptake rates (1.97–3.19 μmol N·g dw ? 1·h ? 1). Very little isotope dilution and FAA release were observed. The agreement between rates calculated with the two different methods averaged 91% in U. fenestrata and 95% in G. pacifica. Recovery of added 15NO3 ? was virtually complete (99%). These tracer incubations show that isotope dilution can be significant in NH4 + uptake experiments conducted with N‐rich macroalgae and that determination of 15N atom % enrichment of the dissolved NH4 + is recommended to avoid poor isotope recovery and underestimation of uptake rates.  相似文献   

2.
Emiliania huxleyi (strain L) expressed an exceptional P assimilation capability. Under P limitation, the minimum cell P content was 2.6 fmol P·cell?1, and cell N remained constant at all growth rates at 100 fmol N·cell?1. Both, calcification of cells and the induction of the phosphate uptake system were inversely correlated with growth rate. The highest (cellular P based) maximum phosphate uptake rate (VmaxP) was 1400 times (i.e. 8.9 h?1) higher than the actual uptake rate. The affinity of the P‐uptake system (dV/dS) was 19.8 L·μmol?1·h?1 at μ = 0.14 d?1. This is the highest value ever reported for a phytoplankton species. Vmax and dV/dS for phosphate uptake were 48% and 15% lower in the dark than in the light at the lowest growth rates. The half‐saturation constant for growth was 1.1 nM. The coefficient for luxury phosphate uptake (Qmaxt/Qmin) was 31. Under P limitation, E. huxleyi expressed two different types of alkaline phosphatase (APase) enzyme kinetics. One type was synthesized constitutively and possessed a Vmax and half‐saturation constant of 43 fmol MFP·cell?1·h?1 and 1.9 μM, respectively. The other, inducible type of APase expressed its highest activity at the lowest growth rates, with a Vmax and half‐saturation constant of 190 fmol MFP·cell?1·h?1 and 12.2 μM, respectively. Both APase systems were located in a lipid membrane close to the cell wall. Under N‐limiting growth conditions, the minimum N quotum was 43 fmol N·cell?1. The highest value for the cell N‐specific maximum nitrate uptake rate (VmaxN) was 0.075 h?1; for the affinity of nitrate uptake, 0.37 L·μmol?1·h?1. The uptake rate of nitrate in the dark was 70% lower than in the light. N‐limited cells were smaller than P‐limited cells and contained 50% less organic and inorganic carbon. In comparison with other algae, E. huxleyi is a poor competitor for nitrate under N limitation. As a consequence of its high affinity for inorganic phosphate, and the presence of two different types of APase in terms of kinetics, E. huxleyi is expected to perform well in P‐controlled ecosystems.  相似文献   

3.
Marine phytoplankton and macroalgae acquire important resources, such as inorganic nitrogen, from the surrounding seawater by uptake across their entire surface area. Rates of ammonium and nitrate uptake per unit surface area were remarkably similar for both marine phytoplankton and macroalgae at low external concentrations. At an external concentration of 1 μM, the mean rate of nitrogen uptake was 10±2 nmol·cm?2·h?1 (n=36). There was a strong negative relationship between log surface area:volume (SA:V) quotient and log nitrogen content per cm2 of surface (slope=?0.77), but a positive relationship between log SA:V and log maximum specific growth rate (μmax; slope=0.46). There was a strong negative relationship between log SA:V and log measured rate of ammonium assimilation per cm2 of surface, but the slope (?0.49) was steeper than that required to sustain μmax (?0.31). Calculated rates of ammonium assimilation required to sustain growth rates measured in natural populations were similar for both marine phytoplankton and macroalgae with an overall mean of 6.2±1.4 nmol·cm?2·h?1 (n=15). These values were similar to maximum rates of ammonium assimilation in phytoplankton with high SA:V, but the values for algae with low SA:V were substantially less than the maximum rate of ammonium assimilation. This suggests that the growth rates of both marine phytoplankton and macroalgae in nature are often constrained by rates of uptake and assimilation of nutrients per cm2 surface area.  相似文献   

4.
Marine invertebrate grazing on temperate macroalgae may exert a significant “top-down” control on macroalgal biomass. We conducted two laboratory experiments to test (1) if consumption by the omnivorous mud snail Ilyanassa obsoleta (Say) on the macroalga Ulva lactuca Linnaeus was a function of food quality (nitrogen content) and (2) if grazing on benthic macroalgae occurred at significant rates in the presence of alternative food sources in the sediment (detritus, larvae, benthic microalgae). Grazing rates were higher for N-enriched macroalgae; however, all snails lost weight when grazing on macroalgae alone, indicating that U. lactuca was a poor food source. The presence of sediment from two sites, a sandy lagoon and an adjacent organic-rich muddy tidal creek, did not affect consumption of macroalgae in microcosm experiments, and the grazing snails were capable of significantly reducing macroalgal biomass associated with both sediment types. Grazing rates by this omnivore were as high as 10.83 mg wet weight·individuals 1·d 1 and were similar to those recorded for herbivorous species. In situ loss rates calculated from average grazing rates per individual and snail abundances (up to 3.5 g dry weight·m 2·d 1) also were comparable with those calculated for herbivorous species. This level of grazing could remove up to 88% of new macroalgal growth at the lagoon site where the N supply was relatively low but had a much smaller effect (18% of new growth) at the high-nutrient creek site. Snails facilitated macroalgal growth at both sites by increasing tissue N content by 40%–80%. Consumption and digestion of macroalgae aided in the recycling of nutrients temporarily bound in the algae and resulted in enrichment of surficial sediments. Increased N sequestration in the sediments also was associated with an interruption of snail burrowing behavior due to persistent anoxia in sediments rich in decaying algal material. Our data suggest that in shallow lagoons where mud snails and benthic macroalgae coexist, grazing may influence N retention in macroalgal biomass.  相似文献   

5.
In many forests of Europe and north-eastern North America elevated N deposition has opened the forest N cycle, resulting in NO3 ? leaching. On the other hand, despite this elevated N deposition, the dominant fate of NO3 ? and NH4 + in some of these forests is biotic or abiotic immobilization in the soil organic matter pool, preventing N losses. The environmental properties controlling mineral N immobilization and the variation and extent of mineral N immobilization in forest soils are not yet fully understood. In this study we investigated a temperate mixed deciduous forest, which is subjected to an average N deposition of 36.5 kg N ha?1 yr?1, but at the same time shows low NO3 ? concentrations in the groundwater. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the turnover rate of the mineral N pool could explain these low N leaching losses. A laboratory 15N pool dilution experiment was conducted to study gross and net N mineralization and nitrification and mineral N immobilization in the organic and uppermost (0–10 cm) mineral layer of the forest soil. Two locations, one at the forest edge (GE) and another one 145 m inside the forest (GF1), were selected. In the organic layers of GE and GF1, the gross N mineralization averaged 10.9 and 11.1 mg N kg?1 d?1, the net N mineralization averaged 6.1 and 6.8 mg N kg?1 d?1 and NH4 + immobilization rates averaged 3.8 and 3.6 mg N kg?1 d?1. In the organic layer of GE and GF1, the average gross nitrification was 3.8 and 4.6 mg N kg?1 d?1, the average net nitrification was ?25.2 and ?31.3 mg N kg?1 d?1 and the NO3 ? immobilization rates averaged 29.0 and 35.9 mg N kg?1 d?1. For the mineral (0–10 cm) layer the same trend could be observed, but the N transformation rates were much lower for the NH4 + pool and not significantly different from zero for the NO3 ? pool. Except for the turnover of the NH4 + pool in the mineral layer, no significant differences were observed between location GE and GF1. The ratio of NH4 + immobilization to gross N mineralization, gross N mineralization to gross nitrification, and NO3 ? immobilisation to gross nitrification led to the following observations. The NH4 + pool of the forest soil was controlled by N mineralization and NO3 ? immobilization was importantly controlling the forest NO3 ? pool. Therefore it was concluded that this process is most probably responsible for the limited NO3 ? leaching from the forest ecosystem, despite the chronically high N deposition rates.  相似文献   

6.
Release of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) by seaweed underpins the microbial food web and is crucial for the coastal ocean carbon cycle. However, we know relatively little of seasonal DOC release patterns in temperate regions of the southern hemisphere. Strong seasonal changes in inorganic nitrogen availability, irradiance, and temperature regulate the growth of seaweeds on temperate reefs and influence DOC release. We seasonally surveyed and sampled seaweed at Coal Point, Tasmania, over 1 year. Dominant species with or without carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrating mechanisms (CCMs) were collected for laboratory experiments to determine seasonal rates of DOC release. During spring and summer, substantial DOC release (10.06–33.54 μmol C · g DW−1 · h−1) was observed for all species, between 3 and 27 times greater than during autumn and winter. Our results suggest that inorganic carbon (Ci) uptake strategy does not regulate DOC release. Seasonal patterns of DOC release were likely a result of photosynthetic overflow during periods of high gross photosynthesis indicated by variations in tissue C:N ratios. For each season, we calculated a reef-scale net DOC release for seaweed at Coal Point of 7.84–12.9 g C · m−2 · d−1 in spring and summer, which was ~16 times greater than in autumn and winter (0.2–1.0 g C · m−2 · d−1). Phyllospora comosa, which dominated the biomass, contributed the most DOC to the coastal ocean, up to ~14 times more than Ecklonia radiata and the understory assemblage combined. Reef-scale DOC release was driven by seasonal changes in seaweed physiology rather than seaweed biomass.  相似文献   

7.
The seaweed Ulva lactuca L. was spray cultured by mariculture effluents in a mattress‐like layer, held in air on slanted boards by plastic netting. Air‐agitated seaweed suspension tanks were the reference. Growth rate, yield, and ammonia‐N removal rate were 11.8% · d?1, 171 g fresh weight (fwt) · m?2 · d?1, and 5 g N · m?2 · d?1, respectively, by the spray‐cultured U. lactuca, and 16.9% · d?1, 283 g fwt · m?2 · d?1, and 7 g N · m?2 · d?1, respectively, by the tank U. lactuca. Biomass protein content was similar in both treatments. Dissolved oxygen in the fishpond effluent water was raised by >3 mg · L?1 and pH by up to half a unit, upon passage through both culture systems. The data suggest that spray‐irrigation culture of U. lactuca in this simple green‐mattress‐like system supplies the seaweed all it needs to grow and biofilter at rates close to those in standard air‐agitated tank culture.  相似文献   

8.
During two intensive field campaigns in summer and autumn 2004 nitrogen (N2O, NO/NO2) and carbon (CO2, CH4) trace gas exchange between soil and the atmosphere was measured in a sessile oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.) forest in Hungary. The climate can be described as continental temperate. Fluxes were measured with a fully automatic measuring system allowing for high temporal resolution. Mean N2O emission rates were 1.5 μg N m−2 h−1 in summer and 3.4 μg N m−2 h−1 in autumn, respectively. Also mean NO emission rates were higher in autumn (8.4 μg N m−2 h−1) as compared to summer (6.0 μg N m−2 h−1). However, as NO2 deposition rates continuously exceeded NO emission rates (−9.7 μg N m−2 h−1 in summer and −18.3 μg N m−2 h−1 in autumn), the forest soil always acted as a net NO x sink. The mean value of CO2 fluxes showed only little seasonal differences between summer (81.1 mg C m−2 h−1) and autumn (74.2 mg C m−2 h−1) measurements, likewise CH4uptake (summer: −52.6 μg C m−2 h−1; autumn: −56.5 μg C m−2 h−1). In addition, the microbial soil processes net/gross N mineralization, net/gross nitrification and heterotrophic soil respiration as well as inorganic soil nitrogen concentrations and N2O/CH4 soil air concentrations in different soil depths were determined. The respiratory quotient (ΔCO2 resp ΔO2 resp−1) for the uppermost mineral soil, which is needed for the calculation of gross nitrification via the Barometric Process Separation (BaPS) technique, was 0.8978 ± 0.008. The mean value of gross nitrification rates showed only little seasonal differences between summer (0.99 μg N kg−1 SDW d−1) and autumn measurements (0.89 μg N kg−1 SDW d−1). Gross rates of N mineralization were highest in the organic layer (20.1–137.9 μg N kg−1 SDW d−1) and significantly lower in the uppermost mineral layer (1.3–2.9 μg N kg−1 SDW d−1). Only for the organic layer seasonality in gross N mineralization rates could be demonstrated, with highest mean values in autumn, most likely caused by fresh litter decomposition. Gross mineralization rates of the organic layer were positively correlated with N2O emissions and negatively correlated with CH4 uptake, whereas soil CO2 emissions were positively correlated with heterotrophic respiration in the uppermost mineral soil layer. The most important abiotic factor influencing C and N trace gas fluxes was soil moisture, while the influence of soil temperature on trace gas exchange rates was high only in autumn.  相似文献   

9.
Dissolved inorganic phosphorus (DIP ) is an essential macronutrient for maintaining metabolism and growth in autotrophs. Little is known about DIP uptake kinetics and internal P‐storage capacity in seaweeds, such as Ulva lactuca (Chlorophyta). Ulva lactuca is a promising candidate for biofiltration purposes and mass commercial cultivation. We exposed U. lactuca to a wide range of DIP concentrations (1–50 μmol · L?1) and a nonlimiting concentration of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN ; 5,000 μmol · L?1) under fully controlled laboratory conditions in a “pulse‐and‐chase” assay over 10 d. Uptake kinetics were standardized per surface area of U. lactuca fronds. Two phases of responses to DIP ‐pulses were measured: (i) a surge uptake (VS ) of 0.67 ± 0.10 μmol · cm?2 · d?1 and (ii) a steady state uptake (VM ) of 0.07 ± 0.03 μmol · cm?2 · d?1. Mean internal storage capacity (ISCP ) of 0.73 ± 0.13 μmol · cm?2 was calculated for DIP . DIP uptake did not affect DIN uptake. Parameters of DIN uptake were also calculated: VS  = 12.54 ± 1.90 μmol · cm?2 · d?1, VM  = 2.26 ± 0.86 μmol · cm?2 · d?1, and ISCN  = 22.90 ± 6.99 μmol · cm?2. Combining ISC and VM values of P and N, nutrient storage capacity of U. lactuca was estimated to be sufficient for ~10 d. Both P and N storage capacities were filled within 2 d when exposed to saturating nutrient concentrations, and uptake rates declined thereafter at 90% for DIP and at 80% for DIN . Our results contribute to understanding the ecological aspects of nutrient uptake kinetics in U. lactuca and quantitatively evaluating its potential for bioremediation and/or biomass production for food, feed, and energy.  相似文献   

10.
We quantified the effects of initial macroalgal tissue nitrogen (N) status (depleted and enriched) and varying pulses of nitrate (NO3?) concentration on uptake and storage of nitrogen in Ulva intestinalis L. and Ulva expansa (Setch.) Setch. et N. L. Gardner using mesocosms modeling shallow coastal estuaries in Mediterranean climates. Uptake of NO3? (μmol · g dry weight [dwt]?1 · h?1) was measured as loss from the water after 1, 2, 4, 8, 12, and 24 h and storage as total tissue nitrogen (% dwt) and nitrate (ppm). Both species of algae exhibited a high affinity for NO3? across all N pulses and initial tissue contents. There was greater NO3? removal from the water for depleted than enriched algae across all time intervals. In the low‐N‐pulse treatment, U. intestinalis and U. expansa removed all measurable NO3? within 8 and 12 h, respectively, and in the medium and high treatments, removal was high and then decreased over time. Maximum mean uptake rates of nitrate were greater for U. expansa (~300 μmol · g dwt?1 · h?1) than U. intestinalis (~100 μmol · g dwt?1 · h?1); however, uptake rates were highly variable over time. Overall, U. expansa uptake rates were double those of U. intestinalis. Maximum tissue NO3? for U. expansa was >1,000 ppm, five times that of U. intestinalis, suggesting that U. expansa has a greater storage capacity in this cellular pool. These results showed that opportunistic green algae with differing tissue nutrient histories were able to efficiently remove nitrate from the water across a wide range of N pulses; thus, both are highly adapted to proliferate in estuarine environments with pulsed nutrient supplies.  相似文献   

11.
Community metabolism and air-sea carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes were investigated in July 1992 on a fringing reef at Moorea (French Polynesia). The benthic community was dominated by macroalgae (85% substratum cover) and comprised of Phaeophyceae Padina tenuis (Bory), Turbinaria ornata (Turner) J. Agardh, and Hydroclathrus clathratus Bory (Howe); Chlorophyta Halimeda incrassata f. ovata J. Agardh (Howe); and Ventricaria ventricosa J. Agardh (Olsen et West), as well as several Rhodophyta (Actinotrichia fragilis Forskál (Børgesen) and several species of encrusting coralline algae). Algal biomass was 171 g dry weight· m?2. Community gross production (Pg), respiration (R), and net calcification (G) were measured in an open-top enclosure. Pg and R were respectively 248 and 240 mmol Co2·m?2·d?1, and there was a slight net dissolution of CaCO3 (0.8 mmol · m?2·d?1). This site was a sink for atmospheric CO2 (10 ± 4 mmol CO2·m?2·d?1), and the analysis of data from the literature suggests that this is a general feature of algal-dominated reefs. Measurement of air-sea CO2 fluxes in open water close to the enclosure demonstrated that changes in small-scale hydrodynamics can lead to misleading conclusions. Net CO2 evasion to the atmosphere was measured on the fringing reef due to changes in the current pattern that drove water from the barrier reef (a C02 source) to the study site.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The incipient levels of lipid hydroperoxides (LHPOs) were determined in selected green, brown, and red macroalgae by the FOX assay using hydroperoxy HPLC mix. The LHPOs contents varied between the investigated species and showed relatively low values in this study. Among the greens, it varied from 12 ± 6.2 μg · g?1 (Codium sursum) to 31.5 ± 2.8 μg · g?1 (Ulva lactuca), whereas in reds, from 5.7 ± 1.6 μg · g?1 (Gracilaria corticata) to 46.2 ± 6 μg · g?1 (Sarconema filiforme), and in browns, from 4.6 ± 4.4 μg · g?1 (Dictyota bartayresiana) to 79 ± 5.0 μg · g?1 (Sargassum tenerrimum), on fresh weight basis. These hydroperoxides represented a minor fraction of total lipids and ranged from 0.04% (S. swartzii) to 1.1% (Stenerrimum) despite being a rich source of highly unsaturated fatty acids. The susceptibility of peroxidation was assessed by specific lipid peroxidazibility (SLP) values for macroalgal tissues. The LHPO values were found to be independent of both the PUFAs contents and their degree of unsaturation (DBI), as evident from the PCA analysis. SLP values were positively correlated with the LHPOs and negatively with DBI. The FOX assay gave ≥20‐fold higher values for LHPOs as compared to the TBARS method for all the samples investigated in this study. Furthermore, Ulactuca cultured in artificial seawater (ASW) enriched with nutrients (N, P, and NP) showed a sharp decline in LHPOs contents relative to those cultured in ASW alone ≤ 0.05. It is inferred from this study that the FOX assay is an efficient, rapid, sensitive, and inexpensive technique for detecting the incipient lipid peroxidation in macroalgal tissues.  相似文献   

14.
Reduced light availability for benthic primary producers as a result of anthropogenic activities may be an important driver of change in coastal seas. However, our knowledge of the minimum light requirements for benthic macroalgae limits our understanding of how these changes may affect primary productivity and the functioning of coastal ecosystems. This knowledge gap is particularly acute in deeper water, where the impacts of increased light attenuation will be most severe. We examined the minimum light requirements of Anotrichium crinitum, which dominates near the maximum depth limit for macroalgae throughout New Zealand and Southern Australia, and is a functional analog of rhodophyte macroalgae in temperate low‐light (deep‐water) habitats throughout the world. These data show that A. crinitum is a shade‐adapted seaweed with modest light requirements for the initiation of net photosynthesis (1.49–2.25 μmol photons · m?2 · s?1) and growth (0.12–0.19 mol photons · m?2 · d?1). A. crinitum maintains high photosynthetic efficiency and pigment content and a low C:N ratio throughout the year and can maintain biomass under sub‐compensation (critical) light levels for at least 5 d. Nevertheless, in situ photon flux is less than the minimum light requirement for A. crinitum on at least 103 d per annum and is rarely sufficient to saturate growth. These findings reinforce the importance of understanding the physiological response of macroalgae at the extremes of environmental gradients and highlight the need to establish minimum thresholds that modification of the subtidal light environment should not cross.  相似文献   

15.
The existence of a phenomenon in phosphorus (P) nutrition comparable to the “Neish effect” in nitrogen (N) nutrition (an inverse relation between seawater N enrichment and carrageenan content) was investigated in the temperate red alga Chondrus crispus Stackhouse. Plants were preconditioned for 17 d and then cultured under varying enrichments of P (0, 3, 6, 10, 15 μM P·wk?1) and a constant N enrichment (53.5 μM N·wk?1) for 5 wk. Tissue total P, tissue total N, and carrageenan contents were then determined. Identical experiments were performed using C. crispus collected during the fall, winter, spring, and summer seasons. The procedure was repeated using material collected during the following fall season and cultured under constant P (6 μM P·wk?1) and varying N enrichments (0, 3, 6, 10, 25 μM N·wk?1). In the fall (P) experiment, carrageenan content was the highest [53.1 ± 0.3% DW (dry weight)], and tissue total P content was the lowest (1.71 ± 0.27 mg P·g DW?1) in plants that received no P enrichment. Carrageenan content was stable (46.1 ± 1.8% DW) for plants given enrichments of 3 μM P·wk?1 and greater. Thus, a decrease in carrageenan content, concomitant with an increase in tissue total P content, was observed, but only at tissue total P levels below 2 mg P·g DW?1. As these levels were always higher than 2 mg P·g DW?1 in the winter, spring, and summer experiments, carrageenan content remained constant within each season at 46.2 ± 1.3, 43.1 m 0.7, and 44.5 ± 0.6% DW, respectively. Nitrogen enrichment of plants collected in the fall did not affect carrageenan content, which was stable at 49.3 ± 0.9% DW. When these plants were compared with those of the previous fall experiment (6 μM P·wk?1 and 53.5 μM N·wk?1), a slight increase in carrageenan content was noted. Thus, at sufficiently high concentration, N also decreased carrageenan content in C. crispus. Phosphorus nutrition had no significant effect on photosynthesis versus irradiance parameters (Pmax, α, Rd, Ic, and Ik), the contents of the photosynthetic pigments chlorophyll-a, phycoerythrin (PE), phycocyanin (PC), and allophycocyanin (APC), and the ratios PE:APC and PC:APC. In contrast, N nutrition affected both Pmaxand the photosynthetic pigment contents. The data indicate that N limitation reduces the number of phycobilisomes but not their size. The greater reduction in phycobiliprotein than chlorophyll-acontent corroborates the natural bleaching phenomenon regularly observed in C. crispus populations during summer when N levels are generally low in seawater. These results suggest that C. crispus in the temperate waters of the Bay of Fundy may experience N limitation, but P limitation is unlikely.  相似文献   

16.
Cuet  P.  Atkinson  M. J.  Blanchot  J.  Casareto  B. E.  Cordier  E.  Falter  J.  Frouin  P.  Fujimura  H.  Pierret  C.  Susuki  Y.  Tourrand  C. 《Coral reefs (Online)》2011,30(1):45-55

Productivity, nutrient input, nutrient uptake, and release rates were determined for a coral-dominated reef flat at La Réunion, France, to assess the influence of groundwater nitrogen on carbon and nutrient budgets. Water samples were collected offshore in the ocean, at the reef crest and back reef for nutrients, picoplankton, pH, and total alkalinity. Volume transport of ocean water across the reef flat was measured using both current meters and drogues. Groundwater advected onto the reef flat and mixed with incoming ocean water. Metabolic rates for the reef community were determined to be: gross primary production = 1,000 mmol C m−2 d−1, community respiration = 960 mmol C m−2 d−1, and community calcification = 210 mmol C m−2 d−1. Across the reef flat, silicate behaved conservatively, there was net uptake of phosphate (0.06 mmol P m−2 d−1) and net release of nitrate, ammonia, dissolved and particulate organic nitrogen (total 7.0 mmol N m−2 d−1). Groundwater nitrate contributed 37% of the increase in nitrate plus ammonia. The first-order mass transfer coefficient of phosphate was 3.3 m d−1, and for nitrate plus ammonia, 5.9 m d−1. Gross N and P uptake from estimates of mass transfer and uptake of particles were 0.37 mmol P m−2 d−1 and 7.2 mmol N m−2 d−1, respectively giving an N:P uptake ratio of 20:1. Thus, the elevation of nitrogen across the reef flat maintains a high N:P flux, enhancing algal growth downstream of the transect. We conclude that net community production (40 mmol C m−2 d−1) was sustained by net uptake of phosphate from the ocean and net uptake of new nitrogen from groundwater.

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17.
Alexandrium catenella (Whedon et Kofoid) Balech was isolated from Thau lagoon (northern Mediterranean) and its growth and uptake characteristics measured for nitrate, ammonium, and urea. Although affinity constants did not indicate a preference for ammonium over nitrate, there was a strong inhibition of nitrate uptake by ammonium when both nitrogen (N) sources were present. Nitrogen budgets during growth in cultures revealed major imbalances between decreases in dissolved N and increases in particulate N, indicating excretion of dissolved organic N during the early part of the growth phase and uptake during the later part. A quasi‐unialgal bloom in November 2001 (4×106 cells·L?1) allowed measurements of uptake of nitrate, nitrite, ammonium, and urea; net and gross growth rate of A. catenella; and grazing rates on this organism. The affinity constants indicate that it is not a strong competitor for the N nutrients tested when these are in low concentrations (<10 μgat N·L?1), compared with other members of the phytoplankton community. Indirect evidence from cultures indicate that dissolved organic N compounds could be important in triggering those blooms. Finally, the strongly unbalanced growth observed in the field indicates that A. catenella exhibits a storage rather than a growth response to a nutrient pulse and is adapted to low frequency events such as the passage of frontal disturbances. The disappearance of A. catenella was due to grazing that balanced growth at the peak of the bloom.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of various macroalgal diets on the growth of grow-out (>20 mm shell length) South African abalone Haliotis midae was investigated on a commercial abalone farm. The experiment consisted of four treatments: fresh kelp blades (Ecklonia maxima (Osbeck) Papenfuss) (c. 10% protein); farmed, protein-enriched Ulva lactuca Linnaeus (c. 26% protein) grown in aquaculture effluent; wild U. lactuca (c. 20% protein); and a combination diet of kelp blades + farmed U. lactuca. Abalone grew best on the combination diet (0.423 ± 0.02% weight d?1 SGR [specific growth rate]; 59.593 ± 0.02 ?m d?1 DISL [daily increment in shell length]; 1.093 final CF [condition factor]) followed by the kelp only diet (0.367 ± 0.02% weight d?1 SGR; 53.148 ± 0.02 ?m d?1 DISL; 1.047 final CF), then the farmed, protein-enriched U. lactuca only diet (0.290 ± 0.02% weight d?1 SGR; 42.988 ± 0.03 um d”1 DISL; 1.013 final CF) that in turn outperformed the wild U. lactuca only diet (-0.079 ± 0.01% weight d?1 SGR; 3.745 ± 0.02 ?m d”?1 DISL; 0.812 final CF). The results suggest that protein alone could not have accounted for the differences produced by the varieties of U. lactuca and that the gross energy content is probably important.  相似文献   

19.
To examine the linkage between forest cover type, litter inputs, and patterns of net N mineralization versus the turnover of N among soil microbes, we measured both the net and gross rates of N mineralization in replicated, adjacent old-growth eastern hemlock [Tsuga canadensis(L.) Carr.] or sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) stands in upper Michigan. Mean aboveground net primary production and annual litterfall mass were significantly higher (P < 0.01) in the maple forests (870 g·m-2·y-1 and 439 g·m-2·y-1, respectively) than in the hemlock forests (480 g·m-2·y-1 and 344 g·m-2·y-1, respectively). Forest floor and coarse woody debris mass, however, were significantly lower (P < 0.05) in the maple forests (2.2 and 0.1 kg·m-2, respectively) than in the hemlock forests (2.9 and 0.2 kg·m-2, respectively). Litterfall N concentration was not significantly different (P > 0.10) between the two forest types. In situ gross rates of N mineralization were higher (P < 0.06) in the maple forests than in the hemlock forests (7.5 and 6.1 mg N·kg soil-1·d-1 respectively), but in situ net N mineralization varied independently of forest type and stand-level litterfall N concentration. Cover type–dependent differences in detritus production and detritus C quality appear to result in different N turnover rates, but the balance between gross mineralization and immobilization of N is very sensitive to within stand variability and varies at a scale smaller than cover type alone can predict. Received 3 Feburary 1999; accepted 27 August 1999.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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