Effect of salinity on growth, pigmentation, N2 fixation and alkaline phosphatase activity of cultured Trichodesmium sp


Autoria(s): Fu, F. X.; Bell, P. R. F.
Data(s)

01/01/2003

Resumo

Trichodesmium sp. isolated from the Great Barrier Reef lagoon was cultured in artificial seawater media containing a range of salinities. Trichodesmium sp. actively grew over a wide range of salinities (22 to 43 psu) and hence can be classed as euryhaline. Maximum growth occurred with salinities in the range 33 to 37 psu. Chl a content and alkaline phosphatase activity were found to increase with salinity over the range 22 to 43 psu, but the N-2 fixation rate was reduced at salinities below and above the range for maximum growth. Growth in media exhibiting maximum growth was characterised by well-dispersed cultures of filaments, while significant aggregations of filaments formed in other media. It is proposed that the tendency for Trichodesmium filaments to aggregate in media with salinities outside the range for maximum growth is an opportunistic response to a deficiency of cellular nitrogen, which results from the reduced N-2 fixation rates, and the aggregation occurs in order to enhance the uptake of combined N released within the aggregates and/or the N-2 fixation within the aggregates.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:66783

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Inter-Research

Palavras-Chave #Ecology #Marine & Freshwater Biology #Oceanography #Trichodesmium Sp. #Salinity #N-2 Fixation #Alkaline Phosphatase Activity #Barrier-reef Lagoon #Blue-green-alga #Nitrogen-fixation #Osmotic-stress #Porphyra-umbilicalis #Marine #Cyanobacteria #Phytoplankton #Oscillatoria #Populations
Tipo

Journal Article