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1.
1. Microbial parameters were determined at five sampling sites in the River Danube up-and downstream of Vienna, Austria, twice monthly over an annual cycle. Bacterial production (BP) was estimated from thymidine and leucine incorporations; additionally, the effect of turbulence on BP and the conversion factors for converting incorporation rates into bacterial cell production were determined using the cumulative approach. 2. BP under turbulent conditions was not significantly different from that under stagnant conditions. For thymidine, a mean annual conversion factor of 3.2 ± 1018 cells mol?1 thymidine incorporated was calculated. For leucine, the corresponding factor was 0.07 ± 1018 cells mol?1 leucine. Average annual BP calculated by thymidine incorporation was significantly higher than BP calculated from leucine incorporation and ranged from 47.2 to 77.5 μg C 1-?1 day?1 depending on the tracer and the conversion factor used. 3. Bacterial growth rates ranged from 0.1 day?1 during winter to 1.7 day?1 in the summer. A strong correlation was found between temperature as well as chlorophyll a and bacterial growth when temperature was greater than 5 °C; a major spring phytoplankton bloom at a temperature below 5 °C did not increase BP. 4. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations varied between 2 and 7.2 mg C 1-?1 and comprised between 50 and 92% of the total organic carbon pool in the River Danube, Based on the DOC concentration and an assumed bacterial growth yield of 20% we calculated mean DOC turnover times of around 60 days in the winter and less than 8 days during the summer.  相似文献   

2.
Bacterial activity was measured in the river Seine by two methods, 3H-thymidine incorporation into DNA and 3H-leucine incorporation into proteins. Both incorporation rates are characterized by low values upstream of Paris, a large increase just downstream of the outfall of the Achères treatment plant effluents, and then decreasing values further downstream. The covariation of both activities is demonstrated by the constancy of the molar ratio (leucine to thymidine incorporation rate) in the range of 6 to 8 for all the samples, except in the perturbed area where it is higher (15 to 35). These high values of molar ratio are linked to the introduction into the river of large sized bacteria (1 µm) with higher incorporation rates per cell or biomass unit than the small autochthonous bacteria (< 1 µm). Growth rates of large bacteria were on average 3.7 times higher than those of small bacteria. Bacterial production was calculated with experimentally determined conversion factors (0.5 × 1018 cells per mole of thymidine incorporated and 900 gC per mole of leucine incorporated) and by taking into account the activity of both size classes of bacteria measured through fractionation experiments (post-incubation filtration). Production estimated in the perturbed area downstream of Ach6res was very high, up to 60 µgC liter–1h–1 in the summer. Carbon consumption by bacteria in the area perturbed by the Ach6res effluents was calculated assuming a growth yield of 0.2 and compared to the load of biodegradable organic matter discharged by the treatment plant. In summer, an additional supply of organic matter is required to account for the intense bacterial activity, suggesting the importance of phytoplankton production in the carbon budget. Offprint requests to: Pierre Servais  相似文献   

3.
1. The microbial metabolism of organic matter in rivers has received little study compared with that of small streams. Therefore, we investigated the rate and location of bacterial production in a sixth‐order lowland river (Spree, Germany). To estimate the contribution of various habitats (sediments, epiphyton, and the pelagic zone) to total bacterial production, we quantified the contribution of these habitats to areal production by bacteria. 2. Large areas of the river bottom were characterized by loose and shifting sands of relatively homogenous particle size distribution. Aquatic macrophytes grew on 40% of the river bottom. Leaf areas of 2.8 m2 m?2 river bottom were found in a 6.6 km river stretch. 3. The epiphyton supported a bacterial production of 5–58 ng C cm?2 h?1. Bacterial production in the pelagic zone was 0.9–3.9 μg C L?1 h?1, and abundance was 4.0–7.8 × 109 cells L?1. Bacterial production in the uppermost 2 cm of sediments ranged from 1 to 8 μg C cm?3 h?1, and abundance from 0.84 to 6.7 × 109 cells cm?3. Bacteria were larger and more active in sediments than in the pelagic zone. 4. In spite of relatively low macrophyte abundance, areal production by bacteria in the pelagic zone was only slightly higher than in the epiphyton. Bacterial biomass in the uppermost 2 cm of sediments exceeded pelagic biomass by factors of 6–22, and sedimentary bacterial production was 17–35 times higher than in the overlying water column. 5. On a square meter basis, total bacterial production in the Spree was clearly higher than primary productivity. Thus, the lowland river Spree is a heterotrophic system with benthic processes dominating. Therefore, sedimentary and epiphytic bacterial productivity form important components of ecosystem carbon metabolism in rivers and shallow lakes. 6. The sediments are focal sites of microbial degradation of organic carbon in a sand‐bottomed lowland river. The presence of a lowland river section within a river continuum probably greatly changes the geochemical fluxes within the river network. This implies that current concepts of longitudinal biogeochemical relationships within river systems have to be revised.  相似文献   

4.
Bacteria were counted with acridine orange epifluorescence technique in two humic lakes during 3 years. Less than 1% of the cells were found attached to detritus aggregates. 73% of the total number and 48% of the total volume were smaller than 1 µm. The mean cell volume ranged from 0.10 to 0.35 µm3 with the highest cell volumes occurring during early summer contemporarily with the growth of the bacterial biomass and probably indicating favourable growth conditions. The mean density of bacteria in oligotrophic brown-water lakes is higher than in oligotrophic clear-water lakes. The development of bacterial biomass showed a regular and seasonally dependent pattern with maxima during early summer and autumn. The importance of different factors for the regulation of bacterial biomass is discussed. Three different approaches were used to estimate bacterial production. These resulted in an average production rate of 15–60 µg C · l?1 · d?1 during the growing season. It was concluded that allochthonous sources comprised a significant part of the energy supply to the bacteria in the two humic lakes.  相似文献   

5.
Dynamics of bacterioplankton in a mesotrophic French reservoir (Pareloup)   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Bacterioplankton abundance, biomass and production were studied at a central station (35 m depth) from April 1987 to September 1988 in a mesotrophic reservoir. Bacterial production was calculated by the (3H) thymidine method.For the water column, integrated estimates of bacterioplankton abundance ranged from 2.3 109 to 4.6 109 cells l–1, and carbon biomass from 0.037 to 0.068 mg C l–1; the thymidine incorporation rates ranged from 0.8 to 17.2 picomoles l–1 h–1, leading to net bacterial production estimates of less than 0.7 µg C l–1 d–1 in winter to 18 µg C l–1 d–1 in summer. About 55% of the production occurred in the euphotic layers.Over the year, the bacterial carbon requirement represented 90% of the autotrophic production for the whole lake. It was five times lower than autotrophic production in spring, but twice as high in summer. This important temporal lack of balance suggests that not all the spring primary production products are consumed immediately and/or that other carbon sources probably support bacterial growth in summer.  相似文献   

6.
A study on the bacterioplankton of Conceição Lagoon (27°34′ S–48°27′ W), Southern Brazil, was carried out in July 2005 (austral winter) and January 2006 (austral summer) to characterize the bacterial spatiotemporal distribution and to determine the heterotrophic and photoautotrophic bacterial dominance in hypoxic/oxic stratified waters. Bacterial abundance increased significantly (p?5 (winter) to 3.21?×?106 cells mL?1 (summer), heterotrophic coccus/rod-shaped (HCR) cells from 7.00?×?104 to 3.60?×?106 cells mL?1, and heterotrophic filamentous (HF) bacteria from 2.90?×?103 to 2.74?×?105 cells mL?1. Bacterial biovolumes also increased in summer with mean biovolumes of CCY ranging from 0.38 to 1.37 μm3, HCR cells from 0.31 to 1.12 μm3, and HF from 3.32 to 11.34 μm3. Principal component analysis showed that salinity, temperature, and light were the abiotic factors that better explained the temporal variability of bacterial assemblages. Bacterial heterotrophy dominated in the lagoon, excepted by the southern and part of central sector in January 2006, when autotrophic-dominated microbial community occurred. Spatially, bacterial assemblages were influenced by nutrient gradient, oxygen, and salinity with a positive relationship between biovolumes and nutrients and a negative relationship between abundance of coccus cyanobacteria and nutrients. area revealed a singular temporal pattern with hypoxic bottom waters in winter and oxygen-rich waters appearing in summer related with the availability of light and predominant microbes. Thus, oxygen consumption/production is likely to be regulated by the amount of light reaching the bottom, stimulating the production of oxygen by oxygenic phototrophs.  相似文献   

7.
Net production of theEcklonia cava community was monitored on a monthly basis for a year, and annual net production was estimated. Growth rate of blades reached a maximum of about 13 g dry wt·m?2·day?1 in spring and a minimum of about 2 g dry wt·m?2·day?1 in late summer. Annual production of blades was calculated to be 2.84 kg dry wt·m?2·year?1. If the growth of stipes is taken into account, annual net production is estimated to be about 2.9 kg dry wt·m?2·year?1. Standing crop was monitored monthly for two and a half years, and a close negative correlation was found between seasonal change in standing crop and net production. Standing crop reached a maximum of about 3 kg dry wt·m?2 in summer and a minimum of about 1 kg dry wt·m?2 in winter. Low productivity in summer at a period of maximum biomass may be explained by the dense canopy and the large area of reproductive portion occupying a blade, which diminish net assimilation.  相似文献   

8.
C. W. Heath 《Hydrobiologia》1988,165(1):77-87
Primary production in Watts Lake, Vestfold Hills, Antarctica (68°36S, 78°13E), was measured from March 1981 to February 1982. Phytoplankton production peaked in autumn and spring, with a September maximum (340 mgC m–2 d–1), then declined in summer and was not detectable in winter. Benthic algal production peaked in summer at 74 mgC m–2 d–1), Production strategies differed, with the more efficient phytoplankton adapted to growth at low light, while benthic production increased with increasing light in summer. Estimation of annual production was 10.1 gC m–2 and 5.5 gC m–2 for the phytoplankton and benthos respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract The investigation of the bacterial community in the Kühw?rter Wasser, a macrophyte-dominated arm of the River Danube backwater system near Vienna, revealed that variation in microbial densities and biomass could be related to a characteristic sequence in morphotype composition over the seasons. Maximal bacterial cell numbers and biomass occured in early summer, with values of up to 9 × 109 cells l−1 and 122 μg C l−1, respectively, caused by a massive increase of vibrio-shaped cells. On the other hand, in early spring, filamentous bacteria were responsible for a marked increase in bacterial biomass, making up 40% of the total bacterial biomass. Over the year, rod-shaped cells were the dominating morphotype, while the biomass of cocci was rather negligible. In winter, cell numbers and biomass showed minimal values with 2.0 × 109 cells l−1 and 28 μg C l−1, respectively, and bacteria were considered to be substrate and temperature limited during this period. Saturation values of the incorporation of 3H-thymidine into DNA, for the estimation of bacterial secondary production, varied seasonally, ranging from 5 nm to 40 nm. Thus, saturation experiments needed to be conducted on a regular basis. Also, the amount of labeled thymidine in the DNA, as a percentage of labeled thymidine in the TCA precipitate, varied over the year. Minimum values of 45% were recorded during the cold season, while maximum values of 75–80% at the beginning of June coincided with high chlorophyll a values and minimal K m-values derived from saturation experiments. The potential role of the nitrogen-rich nucleoside thymidine as a readily utilizable substrate for bacteria during labeling experiments, under varying conditions of substrate availability, is discussed. Bacterial secondary production rates ranged from 0.3 μg C l−1 h−1 in winter to values of 10 μg C l−1 h−1 in August, where phytoplanktonic biomass reached the summer maximum, and bacterial biomass was calculated to be renewed 3 times per day. An estimation of the bacterial carbon demand showed that for the major part of the year, with the exception of early spring, the bacterioplankton community in the Kühw?rter Wasser was dependent on carbon sources other than phytoplanktonic primary production. Received: 22 March 1996; Revised: 1 August 1996  相似文献   

10.
Twenty-one monthly collections of the Antarctic prosobranch gastropod Laevilacunaria antarctica Martens 1885 were obtained by divers at Signy Island, South Orkney Islands. Animals were contagiously distributed in the depth range 2–12 m below mean low water, with a mean monthly density of 199.0 ± 207.3 (S.D.) m?2. Size frequency distribution was analysed, and at least three year classes identified. There was a prolonged annual recruitment from mid winter to mid summer, and juveniles dominated the population numerically for ten months of the year. Growth was seasonal, with a high rate during the Austral spring and summer, and a reduced rate during winter. A mean biomass of 356.3 mg dry tissue wt · m?2 and a total annual production of 812.2 mg · m?2 were estimated for the second year of study, and a production to biomass ratio of 2.28 obtained.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the ecology of viruses in Lake Bourget (France) from January to August 2008. Data were analysed for viral and bacterial abundance and production, viral decay, frequency of lysogenic cells, the contribution of bacteriophages to prokaryotic mortality and their potential influence on nutrient dynamics. Analyses and experiments were conducted on samples from the epilimnion (2 m) and the hypolimnion (50 m), taken at the reference site of the lake. The abundance of virus‐like particles (VLP) varied from 3.4 × 107 to 8.2 × 107 VLP ml?1; with the highest numbers and virus‐to‐bacterium ratio (VBR = 69) recorded in winter. Viral production varied from 3.2 × 104 VLP ml?1 h?1 (July) to 2 × 106 VLP ml?1 h?1 (February and April), and production was lower in the hypolimnion. Viral decay rate reached 0.12–0.15 day?1, and this parameter varied greatly with sampling date and methodology (i.e. KCN versus filtration). Using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis, viral lysis was responsible for 0% (January) to 71% (February) of bacterial mortality, while viral lysis varied between 0% (April) and 53% (January) per day when using a modified dilution approach. Calculated from viral production and burst size, the virus‐induced bacterial mortality varied between 0% (January) and 68% (August). A weak relationship was found between the two first methods (TEM versus dilution approach). Interestingly, flow cytometry analysis performed on the dilution experiment samples revealed that the viral impact was mostly on high DNA content bacterial cells whereas grazing, varying between 8.3% (June) and 75.4% (April), was reflected in both HDNA and LDNA cells equally. The lysogenic fraction varied between 0% (spring/summer) and 62% (winter) of total bacterial abundance, and increased slightly with increasing amounts of mitomycin C added. High percentages of lysogenic cells were recorded when bacterial abundance and activity were the lowest. The calculated release of carbon and phosphorus from viral lysis reached up to 56.5 µgC l?1 day?1 (assuming 20 fgC cell?1) and 1.4 µgP l?1 day?1 (assuming 0.5 fgP cell?1), respectively, which may represent a significant fraction of bacterioplankton nutrient demand. This study provides new evidence of the quantitative and functional importance of the virioplankton in the functioning of microbial food webs in peri‐alpine lakes. It also highlights methodologically dependent results.  相似文献   

12.
The monthly productivity, standing stock, plant size and density of Ecklonia radiata (C.Ag.) J. Agardh is presented for a 2-yr period. Annual production was 20.7 kg wet wt · m?2 with maximum growth of 0.9% per day in spring (October–December) and minimum growth of 0.2% per day in late summer. (March–April). A close negative correlation was found between spring and summer growth and water temperature. Maximum biomass (18 kg wet wt · m ?2) did not coincide with maximum growth but occurred in late summer. Minimum biomass (6 kg wet wt · m ?2) occurred in winter. An estimate of erosion of plant material from the kelp bed was made from these data and a hypothesis concerning the ultimate destination of eroded and removed kelp plants was formulated.  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of this study was to determine the depth distribution of bacterial biomass and production in a stratified lake and to test techniques to measure bacterial production in anaerobic waters. Bacterial abundance and incorporation of both [3H]thymidine and [3H]leucine into protein were highest in the metalimnion, at the depth at which oxygen first became unmeasurable. In contrast, [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA was highest in the epilimnion. The ratios of incorporation into DNA/protein averaged 2.2, 0.49, and 0.95 for the epilimnion, metalimnion, and hypolimnion, respectively. Low incorporation into DNA was not due to artifacts associated with the DNA isolation procedure. Recovery of added [3H]DNA was about 90% in waters in which the portion of [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA was about 40%. At least some obligate anaerobic bacteria were capable of assimilating thymidine since aeration of anaerobic hypolimnion waters substantially inhibited thymidine incorporation. The depth profile of bacterial production estimated from total thymidine and leucine incorporation and the frequency of dividing cells were all similar, with maximal rates in the metalimnion. However, estimates of bacterial production based on frequency of dividing cells and leucine incorporation were usually significantly higher than estimates based on thymidine incorporation (using conversion factors from the literature), especially in anaerobic hypolimnion waters. These data indicate that the thymidine approach must be examined carefully if it is to be applied to aquatic systems with low oxygen concentrations. Our results also indicate that the interface between the aerobic epilimnion and anaerobic hypolimnion is the site of intense bacterial mineralization and biomass production which deserves further study.  相似文献   

14.
Production by attached and free-living planktonic bacteria in two blackwater rivers in the Southeastern United States was measured over a period of 14 months by using the rate of incorporation of [methyl-3H]thymidine into DNA. Production rates and biomass dynamics were compared to determine the potential for in situ production to supply planktonic biomass. Bacterial production in these rivers was moderate and varied seasonally. Rates varied from 0.058 to 2.120 mg of C m−3 h−1 in the Ogeechee River and from 0.002 to 2.418 mg of C m−3 h−1 in Black Creek. Regressions of growth rate on various environmental variables showed that temperature and total dissolved organic carbon concentration were the best predictors of growth. Although attached bacteria were <21% of the total biomass, they accounted for up to 53% of the total production. Turnover times for attached bacteria ranged from <1 day to >3 years depending on season. Turnover times of free-living bacteria varied from 4.4 days to 11.8 years. Comparisons of biomass with production indicated that during most seasons, the majority of bacterial biomass in these rivers was of allochthonous origin. During summer, when water temperatures were high, bacterial growth in the river may have supplied a greater percentage of the standing stock of bacteria than allochthonous inputs.  相似文献   

15.
Production and decomposition processes in a saline meromictic lake   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Bacterial and phytoplankton cell number and productivity were measured in the mixolimnion and chemocline of saline meromictic Mahoney Lake during the spring (Apr.–May) and fall (Oct.) between 1982 and 1987. High levels of bacterial productivity (methyl 3H-thymidine incorporation), cell numbers, and heterotrophic assimilation of 14C-glucose and 14C-acetate in the mixolimnion shifted from near surface (1.5 m), at a secondary chemocline, to deeper water (4–7 m) as this zone of microstratification gradually weakened during a several year drying trend in the watershed. In the mixolimnion, bacterial carbon (13–261 µgC 1–1) was often similar to phytoplankton carbon (44–300 µgC 1–1) and represented between 14–57% of the total microbial (phytoplankton + bacteria) carbon depending on the depth interval. Phototrophic purple sulphur bacteria were stratified at the permanent primary chemocline (7.5–8.3 m) in a dense layer (POC 250 mg 1–1, bacteriochlorophyll a 1500–70001µ 1–1), where H2S changed from 0.1 to 2.5 mM over a 0.2 m depth interval. This phototrophic bacterial layer contributed between 17–66% of the total primary production (115–476 mgC m–2 d–1) in the vertical water column. Microorganisms in the phototrophic bacterial layer showed a higher uptake rate for acetate (0.5–3.7 µC 1–1 h–1) than for glucose (0.3–1.4 µgC 1–1 h–1) and this heterotrophic activity as well as bacterial productivity were 1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher in the dense plate than in the mixolimnetic waters above. Primary phytoplanktonic production in the mixolimnion was limited by phosphorus while light penetration appeared to regulate phototrophic productivity of the purple sulphur bacteria.  相似文献   

16.
Summary 1. Primary production by Chara vulgaris and by epipelic and epilithic algal assemblages was measured in a semiarid, Mediterranean stream (Chicamo stream, Murcia, Spain) during one annual cycle. 2. The rates of gross primary production (GPP) and community respiration (CR) were determined for each algal assemblage using oxygen change in chambers. The net daily metabolism (NDM) and the GPPd?1 : CR24 ratio were estimated by patch‐weighting the assemblage‐level metabolism values. 3. Gross primary production and CR showed significant differences between assemblages and dates. The highest rates were measured in summer and spring, while December was the only month when there were no significant differences in either parameters between assemblages. GPP was strongly correlated with respiration, but not with algal biomass. 4. Chara vulgaris showed the highest mean annual metabolic rates (GPP = 2.80 ± 0.83 gC m?2 h?1, CR = 0.76 ± 0.29 gC m?2 h?1), followed by the epilithic assemblage (GPP = 1.97 ± 0.73 gC m?2 h?1, CR = 0.41 ± 0.12 gC m?2 h?1) and epipelic algae (GPP = 1.36 ± 0.22 gC m?2 h?1, CR = 0.39 ± 0.06 gC m?2 h?1). 5. The epipelic assemblage dominated in terms of biomass (82%) and areal cover (88%), compared with the other primary producers. Epipelic algae contributed 84% of gross primary production and 86% of community respiration in the stream. 6. Mean monthly air temperature was the best single predictor of macrophyte respiration and of epipelic GPP and CR. However, ammonium concentration was the best single predictor of C. vulgaris GPP, and suspended solid concentration of epilithon GPP and CR. 7. Around 70% of the variation in both mean GPP and mean CR was explained by the mean monthly air temperature alone. A multiple regression model that included conductivity, PAR and nitrates in addition to mean monthly air temperature, explained 99.99% of the variation in mean CR. 8. Throughout the year, NDM was positive (mean value 7.03 gC m?2 day?1), while the GPP : CR24 ratio was higher than 1, confirming the net autotrophy of the system.  相似文献   

17.
Senescent, naturally dried leaves of Typha domingensis were incubated inthe littoral region of a coastal lagoon and epiphytic bacterial volume,abundance, biomass and secondary productivity were measured during 127 daysof decomposition. The peak of cell abundance was registered at t =127 days when expressed per leaf surface area (10.07×107cells cm-2; 7.26 µgC cm-2), and at t= 26 days when expressed per biofilm dry mass (38.10 ×107 cells (mgDM biofilm)-1, 30.52 µgC(mgDM biofilm)-1). The highest values of bacterial biovolumesand lower turnover time were usually obtained in the beginning of thecolonization. Leu:Tdr ratios were also higher in the beginning of thecolonization, when bacterial community presented unbalanced metabolism.Consequently, the highest discrepancies between the bacterial secondaryproduction estimated by leu and Tdr incorporation were observed in the first2 days of decomposition. On average, the bacterial secondary productivityestimated by leu incorporation was 2.1 times higher than the valuesestimated by Tdr incorporation when the empirical factor for Tdr wasobtained from the relationship between Tdr and biomass increment. Thisdifference increased to 4.2 when the empirical factor was obtained from therelationship between Tdr and cell numbers increment. An average of bothmethods (0.0037 to 0.1397 µgC cm-2 h-1)produced results that fall within the range reported in the literature forepiphytic bacteria of freshwater ecosystems.  相似文献   

18.
1. We examined standing-senescing, standing-dead and recently fallen leaf blades of Carex walteriana in fens of the Okefenokee Swamp to determine the nature of the microbial decomposers in the early stages of decomposition, measuring both standing crops and productivities ([3H]leucineprotein method for bacteria, [14C]acetateergosterol for fungi). 2. Fungal standing crops (ergosterol) became detectable at the mid-senescence stage (leaves about half yellow-brown) and rose to 14–31 mg living-fungal C g?1 organic mass of the decaying system; bacterial standing crops (direct microscopy) were ± 0.2 mgC g?1 until the fallen-leaf stage, when they rose to as high as 0.9 mgC g?1. 3. Potential microbial specific growth rates were similar between fungi and bacteria, at about 0.03–0.06 day?1, but potential production of fungal mass was 115–512 μgC g?1 organic mass day?1, compared with 0–22 μgC g?1 day?1 for bacteria. Rates of fungal production were about 6-fold lower on average than previously found for a saltmarsh grass, perhaps because much lower phosphorus concentratiofis in the freshwater fen limit fungal activity. 4. There was little change in lignocellulose (LC) percentage of decaying leaves, although net loss of organic mass at the fallen, broken stage was estimated to be 59%, suggesting that LC was lost at rates proportional to those for total organics during decay. Monomers of fungal-wall polymers (glucosamine and mannose) accumulated 2- to 4-fold during leaf decay. This may indicate that an increase found for proximate (acid-detergent) lignin could be at least partially due to accumulation of refractory fungal-wall material, including melanin. 5. A common sequence in decaying aquatic grasses is suggested: principally fungal alteration of LC during standing decay, followed by a trend toward bacterial decomposition of the LC after leaves fall and break into particles.  相似文献   

19.
Rates of bacterial secondary production by free-living bacterioplankton in the Okefenokee Swamp are high and comparable to reported values for a wide variety of marine and freshwater ecosystems. Bacterial production in the water column of five aquatic habitats of the Okefenokee Swamp was substantial despite the acidic (pH 3.7), low-nutrient, peat-accumulating character of the environment. Incorporation of [3H]thymidine into cold-trichloroacetic acid-insoluble material ranged from 0.03 to 2.93 nmol liter−1 day−1) and corresponded to rates of bacterial secondary production of 3.4 to 342.2 μg of carbon liter−1 day−1 (mean, 87.8 μg of carbon liter−1 day−1). Bacterial production was strongly seasonal and appeared to be coupled to annual changes in temperature and primary production. Bacterial doubling times ranged from 5 h to 15 days and were fastest during the warm months of the year, when the biomass of aquatic macrophytes was high, and slowest during the winter, when the plant biomass was reduced. The high rates of bacterial turnover in Okefenokee waters suggest that bacterial growth is an important mechanism in the transformation of dissolved organic carbon into the nutrient-rich bacterial biomass which is utilized by microconsumers.  相似文献   

20.
There has been renewed interest in the combined use of high-rate algal ponds (HRAP) for wastewater treatment and biofuel production. Successful wastewater treatment requires year-round efficient nutrient removal while high microalgal biomass yields are required to make biofuel production cost-effective. This paper investigates the year-round performance of microalgae in a 5-ha demonstration HRAP system treating primary settled wastewater in Christchurch, New Zealand. Microalgal performance was measured in terms of biomass production, nutrient removal efficiency, light absorption and photosynthetic potential on seasonal timescales. Retention time-corrected microalgal biomass (chlorophyll a) varied seasonally, being lowest in autumn and winter (287 and 364 mg m?3day?1, respectively) and highest in summer (703 mg m?3day?1), while the conversion efficiency of light to biomass was greatest in winter (0.39 mg Chl- a per μmol) and lowest in early summer (0.08 mg Chl- a per μmol). The percentage of ammonium (NH4–N) removed was highest in spring (79 %) and summer (77 %) and lowest in autumn (47 %) and winter (53 %), while the efficiency of NH4–N removal per unit biomass was highest in autumn and summer and lowest in winter and spring. Chlorophyll-specific light absorption per unit biomass decreased as total chlorophyll increased, partially due to the package effect, particularly in summer. The proportional increase in the maximum electron transport rate from winter to summer was significantly lower than the proportional increase in the mean light intensity of the water column. We concluded that microalgal growth and nutrient assimilation was constrained in spring and summer and carbon limitation may be the likely cause.  相似文献   

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