Abstract: | Cadmium and copper inhibition of nutrient uptake by the green alga Scenedesmus quadricauda is highly pH dependent in an inorganic medium; both metals are less toxic at low pH. The alga was grown in chemostats with both N and P approaching limiting levels; it was then possible to study metal toxicity to the nitrate, ammonium, and phosphate uptake systems of algae in an identical physiological state. When the logarithm of the Cd concentration causing 25% inhibition of nitrate, ammonium, and phosphate uptake was regressed against pH almost perfect linear relationships were obtained. This was also true at the 50% inhibition level, except for a smaller than predicted increase in Cd toxicity to ammonium uptake at pH 8, which may be due to the beginning of Cd precipitation at this pH. Cu2+ toxicity was linearly related to pH for ammonium and phosphate uptake and although, its toxicity for nitrate uptake also increased with pH, the increase was not perfectly linear. The toxicity of total Cu showed no linear relationship to pH. Cd2+ and Cu2+ toxicity increased by up to four orders of magnitude from pH 5 to 8. Competition between free metal and hydrogen ions for uptake sites on the cell surface is suggested as a mechanism increasing the toxicity of free metal, ions as the hydrogen ion content decreases (i.e. at higher pH). |