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- Title
UPTAKE AND RELEASE OF NITROGEN BY THE MACROALGAE GRACILARIA VERMICULOPHYLLA (RHODOPHYTA).
- Authors
Tyler, Anna Christina; McGlathery, Karen J.
- Abstract
Macroalgae, often the dominant primary producers in shallow estuaries, can be important regulators of nitrogen (N) cycling. Like phytoplankton, actively growing macroalgae release N to the water column; yet little is known about the quantity or nature of this release. Using 15N labeling in laboratory and field experiments, we estimated the quantity of N released relative to assimilation and gross uptake by Gracilaria vermiculophylla (Ohmi) Papenfuss (Rhodophyta, Gracilariales), a non-native macroalgae. Field experiments were carried out in Hog Island Bay, a shallow back-barrier lagoon on the Virginia coast where G. vermiculophylla makes up 85%–90% of the biomass. There was good agreement between laboratory and field measurements of N uptake and release. Daily N assimilation in field experiments (32.3±7.2 μmol N·g dw−1·d−1) was correlated with seasonal and local N availability. The average rate of N release across all sites and dates (65.8±11.6 μmol N·g dw−1·d−1) was 67% of gross daily uptake, and also varied among sites and seasons (range=33%–99%). Release was highest when growth rates and nutrient availability were low, possibly due to senescence during these periods. During summer biomass peaks, estimated N release from macroalgal mats was as high as 17 mmol N·m−2·d−1. Our results suggest that most estimates of macroalgal N uptake severely underestimate gross N uptake and that N is taken up, transformed, and released to the water column on short time scales (minutes–hours).
- Subjects
HOG Island (Va.); VIRGINIA; RED algae; GRACILARIA; GRACILARIACEAE; NITROGEN; LAGOON ecology
- Publication
Journal of Phycology, 2006, Vol 42, Issue 3, p515
- ISSN
0022-3646
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1529-8817.2006.00224.x