Abstract: | Stimulation of dark fixation of carbon by NH4+ is often used as an indicator of phytoplankton N deficiency. This assay is based on the influence of available NH4+ on anaplerotic CO2 fixation by algae. However, carbon fixation by chemoautotrophic NH4+-oxidizing bacteria may also be stimulated by NH4+ enrichment, a process that can mask the algal response in natural communities. NH4+ addition enhanced dark carbon fixation up to 300%, relative to unamended controls, in organisms collected on a 0.7-μm retention filter in oligotrophic Flathead Lake, Montana, but the effect was not detectable in the presence of nitrapyrin, an inhibitor of NH4+-oxidizing bacteria. Dark carbon fixation was enhanced with addition of NH4+ in organisms retained on 2-μm filters (which should allow passage of most bacteria). NH4+ stimulated dark carbon fixation in N-deficient axenic cultures of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang but not in N-replete cultures in both the presence and absence of nitrapyrin. Application of nitrapyrin or size fractionation treatments, to separate the processes of dark carbon fixation by nitrifiers and phytoplankton, may improve the efficacy of assays using NH4+ stimulation of dark carbon fixation to specifically indicate N deficiency in natural algal communities. |