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Dependence of phytoplankton assimilation quotients on light and nitrogen source: implications for oceanic primary productivity
Authors:Megard, R. O.   Berman, T.   Curtis, P. J.   Vaughan, P. W.
Affiliation:Department of Ecology and Behavioral Biology, University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN 55455 1Kinneret Limnological Laboratory P.O. Box 345, Tiberias 14-102, Israel
Abstract:Photosynthetic production of oxygen by phytoplankton assemblagedominated by Peridinium in Lake Kinneret, Israel, generallyexceeds the molar equivalent rate of carbon assimilation. Carbonassimilation occurs only if oxygenic photosynthesis exceedsa light-dependent threshold. Assimilation quotients (mol C molO2–1) are a variable function of irradiance, and typicallyonly about one-half of the photoreductant produced during oxygenicphotosynthesis is used for reduction of carbon dioxide. Mostof the residual oxygenic photoreductant probably is used forlight-dependent reduction of nitrate, which competes with carbondioxide for oxygenic photoreductant. Nitrate is an importantsource of nitrogen for this algal assemblage, and light-dependentnitrate reduction probably is much larger than carbon dioxidereduction at lowest irradiances in the euphotic zone. Oxygenproduction also may be much larger than carbon assimilationat low light levels in other environments where oxidized formsof nitrogen are important nitrogenous nutrients for phytoplankton,as in the lower euphotic zone of the sea, where low rates ofcarbon assimilation by phytoplankton have been thought to beinconsistent with the amount of oxygen that accumulates duringsummer.
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