Sequential nutrient uptake as a potential mechanism for phytoplankton to maintain high primary productivity and balanced nutrient stoichiometry
-
Published:2017-05-16
Issue:9
Volume:14
Page:2469-2480
-
ISSN:1726-4189
-
Container-title:Biogeosciences
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Yin KedongORCID, Liu Hao, Harrison Paul J.
Abstract
Abstract. We hypothesize that phytoplankton have the sequential nutrient uptake strategy to maintain nutrient stoichiometry and high primary productivity in the water column. According to this hypothesis, phytoplankton take up the most limiting nutrient first until depletion, continue to draw down non-limiting nutrients and then take up the most limiting nutrient rapidly when it is available. These processes would result in the variation of ambient nutrient ratios in the water column around the Redfield ratio. We used high-resolution continuous vertical profiles of nutrients, nutrient ratios and on-board ship incubation experiments to test this hypothesis in the Strait of Georgia. At the surface in summer, ambient NO3− was depleted with excess PO43− and SiO4− remaining, and as a result, both N : P and N : Si ratios were low. The two ratios increased to about 10 : 1 and 0. 45 : 1, respectively, at 20 m. Time series of vertical profiles showed that the leftover PO43− continued to be removed, resulting in additional phosphorus storage by phytoplankton. The N : P ratios at the nutricline in vertical profiles responded differently to mixing events. Field incubation of seawater samples also demonstrated the sequential uptake of NO3− (the most limiting nutrient) and then PO43− and SiO4− (the non-limiting nutrients). This sequential uptake strategy allows phytoplankton to acquire additional cellular phosphorus and silicon when they are available and wait for nitrogen to become available through frequent mixing of NO3− (or pulsed regenerated NH4). Thus, phytoplankton are able to maintain high productivity and balance nutrient stoichiometry by taking advantage of vigorous mixing regimes with the capacity of the stoichiometric plasticity. To our knowledge, this is the first study to show the in situ dynamics of continuous vertical profiles of N : P and N : Si ratios, which can provide insight into the in situ dynamics of nutrient stoichiometry in the water column and the inference of the transient status of phytoplankton nutrient stoichiometry in the coastal ocean.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference45 articles.
1. Armstrong, F. A. J., Stearns, C. R., and Strickland, J. D. H.: The measurement of upwelling and subsequent biological processes by means of the Technicon Autoanalyzer® and associated equipment, Deep-Sea Res.-Oceanogr., 14, 381–389, 1967. 2. Berdalet, E., Marrasé, C., Estrada, M., Arin, L., and MacLean, M. L.: Microbial community responses to nitrogen- and phosphorus-deficient nutrient inputs: microplankton dynamics and biochemical characterization, J. Plank. Res., 18, 1627–1641, 1996. 3. Bertilsson, S., Berglund, O., Karl, D. M., and Chisholm, S. W.: Elemental composition of marine Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus: Implications for the ecological stoichiometry of the sea, Limnol. Oceanogr., 48, 1721–1731, 2003. 4. Brzezinski, M. A.: The Si : C : N ratio of marine diatoms: interspecific variability and the effect of some environmental variables, J. Phycol., 21, 247–257, 1985. 5. Clifford, P. J., Harrison, P. J., St. John, M. A., Yin, K., and Albright, L. J.: Plankton production and nutrient dynamics in the Fraser River plume, 1989, Manuscript Report No. 54, Department of Oceanography, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC Canada, 225 pp., 1991a.
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|