Abstract: | During competition for phosphate in continuous cultures, Cosmarium subcostatum Nord. routinely displaced Staurastrum paradoxum Meyer. The rate of displacement was independent of cell density between 100 and 6000 cells mL?1. This suggests that competition for nutrients is important over a wide range of naturally occurring cell densities. C. subcostatum had higher saturated rates of phosphate uptake but also higher half saturation values for uptake. As a result, the two desmids were similarly able to take up phosphate at low concentrations. The competitive advantage of C. subcostatum lay in its greater yield per unit of phosphorus. Growth of the two algae in shared medium in a dual-chamber chemostat had no effect on uptake or yield characteristics. |