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1.
The respiration and excretion rates of Calanus glacialis (Jaschnov) Copepodite Stages III, IV, V, and adult females from the drift-ice area east of Svalbard (Barents Sea) were measured in shipboard experiments during the period from 27 May to 13 June, 1983. The phytoplankton biomass and abundance varied considerably between localities, but these variations were not generally reflected in the respiration and excretion rates of the copepod. The respiration and excretion rates of C. glacialis at the ambient temperature of-1.8°C (average respiration rates of 0.95, 0.73, 0.57, and 0.60 l O2 mg-1 dry wt h-1 for Copepodite Stage III, IV, V, and adult females, respectively) were similar to those previously reported for other large-sized copepods from cold or temperate areas. Average respiration and excretion rates tended to decrease with incubation time or time after capture. Measurements on ten occasions within a period of 27 h after capture revealed excretion rates of ammonium ranging between 2.9 and 16.8 for C III, 3.7 and 21.1 for C IV, 1.3 and 28.4 for C V, and 1.6 and 18.7 for adult females, all expressed as nmol mg-1 dry wt h-1. In all experiments, excretion rates of inorganic phosphate varied between 0.7 and 1.5 (C III), 0.5 and 1.1 (C IV), 0.2 and 0.8 (C V), and 0.3 and 1.0 (adult females) nmol mg-1 dry wt h-1. Ratios of O:N, O:P, and N:P indicated that much of the metabolic energy was derived from catabolism of proteins. Comparison of the turnover rate of carbon and nitrogen showed, however, that nitrogen turnover was between 2.6 and 8.9 times higher than that of carbon. This may indicate that the copepods deaminate ingested protein, with the carbon skeleton of the amino acids subsequently being used in the synthesis of lipid compounds, possibly wax esters.  相似文献   

2.
Carbon content and rate of dark respiration was determined on individual Strombidium capitatum (Leegard) Kahl cells uniformly labelled with 14C in culture. Isolated individuals were incubated in sterile medium in the dark for periods of up to 24h, and cumulative respired 14CO2 was retained in an alkaline trap. Cell carbon varied by more than an order of magnitude and followed a bi-modal distribution. Small cells of 2 to 7 ng C cell-1 respired at specific rates of 3 to 5% cell C h-1, whereas large cells of 7 to 25 ng C cell-1 respired at 1 to 2% cell C h-1. Mortality was greater for small cells than for large ones, and was greatest during the first few hours. Small cells accounted for 40% of all cells at initial time, T 0, whereas none of these survived a 16 h incubation. It is proposed that the rates of carbon-specific dark respiration observed for small cells compromise their ability to survive more than a few hours in the dark without food. The combination of influence of size (carbon content) together with differential proportions of small cells resulting from mortality contributed to considerable variance in carbon-specific respiration rates. When smaller and larger modal groups were considered separately, this variance was significantly reduced for both groups. Using this refined data, there was no significant starvation-induced reduction in carbon-specific rates. The mean rate remained at between 1.1 and 1.4% cell C h-1 for large cells over the 24 h period, and between 3.8 and 4.1% cell C h-1 for small cells over the 8 h of their survival. This observation for a planktonic mixotrophic ciliate contrasts with published observations for heterotrophic protists which have reported reduction of carbon-specific respiration rate with starvation.  相似文献   

3.
Harland  A. D.  Davies  P. S. 《Marine Biology》1995,123(4):715-722
Dark respiration of the symbiotic sea anemone Anemonia viridis (Forskäl) was observed to increase by 34% when anemones were exposed to hyperoxic sea water (150% oxygen saturation) overnight, and by 39% after exposure to 6 h in the light at a saturating irradiance of 300 E m-2 s-1 at normoxia (100% oxygen saturation). No increase due to light stimulation was observed in aposymbiotic control anemones. In darkness, the oxygen concentration of the coelenteric fluid was hypoxic. However, within 10 min of anemones being illuminated, coelenteric fluid was hyperoxic, and it remained elevated throughout a 12 h light period. When measured over a 24 h period (12 h light: 12 h dark), the dark respiration rate increased gradually over the first 6 h of the light period until it was 35% above the dark night-time resting rate. It remained elevated throughout the remaining light period and for 2 h into the following dark period, after which it fell back to the resting rate. Gross photosynthesis (P gross) increased significantly when anemones were exposed to either hyperoxia (150% oxygen saturation) or 300 E m-2 s-1 at normoxia. This increase was not observed when symbiotic anemones were illuminated at a low-light intensity of 100 E m-2 s-1. The results of this study suggest that respiration in the dark is limited by oxygen diffusion and that normal respiration is restored in the daytime by utilisation of the oxygen released by photosynthesis. Furthermore, it appears that the increased respiration following exposure to high-light intensities provides a CO2-rich intracellular environment which further enhances the photosynthetic rate of the zooxanthellae.  相似文献   

4.
Release of14C-labelled carbon dioxide from uniformly labelled cells was used to measure respiration by individual ciliates in 2-h incubations in 1989 and 1990. In a strictly heterotrophic ciliate,Strobilidium spiralis (Leegaard, 1915), release of labelled carbon dioxide was equivalent to ca. 2.8% of cell C h–1 at 20°C, and there was no difference between rates in the dark and light. In the chloroplast-retaining ciliatesLaboea strobila Lohmann, 1908,Strombidium conicum (Lohmann, 1908) Wulff, 1919 andStrombidium capitatum (Leegaard, 1915) Kahl, 1932, release of labelled carbon dioxide was less in the light than in the dark in experiments done at 15°C. InL. strobila release of radiolabel as carbon dioxide was equivalent to ca. 2.4% of cell C h–1 in the dark but ca. 1% at 50µE m–2 s–1, an irradiance limiting to photosynthesis. InS. conicum release of radiolabel as carbon dioxide was equivalent to ca. 4.4% of cell C h–1 in the dark, but at an irradiance saturating to photosynthesis (250 to 300µE m–2 s–1) there was no detectable release of labelled carbon dioxide. InS. capitatum release of radiolabel as carbon dioxide was equivalent to ca. 4.3% of cell C h–1 in the dark but at an irradiance saturating to photosynthesis was ca. 2.4% of cell C h–1. These data, combined with data from photosynthetic uptake experiments, indicate that14C uptake underestimates the total benefit of photosynthesis by 50% or more in chloroplastretaining ciliates.Contribution no. 7510 from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution  相似文献   

5.
Photoadaptation of photosynthesis in Gonyaulax polyedra   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Gonyaulax polyedra Stein exhibited a combination of photoadaptive strategies of photosynthesis when only a single environmental variable, the light intensity during growth, was altered. Which of several biochemical/physiological adjustments to the light environment were employed depended on the level of growth irradiance. The photoadaptive strategies employed over any small range of light levels appeared to be those best suited for optimizing photosynthetic performance and not photosynthetic capacity. (Photosynthetic performance, P i, is defined as the rate of photosynthesis occurring at the level of growth irradiance.) Among all photosynthetic parameters examined, only photosynthetic performance showed a consistent correspondence to growth rates of G. polyedra. Above 3500 to 4000 W cm-2, where photosynthetic performance was equal to photosynthetic capacity, cells were not considered light-limited in either photosynthesis or growth. At these higher light levels, photosynthetic perfomance, cell volume, growth rates and respiration rates remained maximal; photosynthetic pigment content varied only slightly, while the photosynthetic capacity of the cells declined. At intermediate light levels (3000 to 1500 W cm-2), photosynthesis, not growth, was light-limited, and photoadaptive strategies were induced which enhance absorption capabilities and energy transfer efficiencies of chlorophyll a to the reaction centers of G. polyedra. Photosynthetic capacity remained constant at about 280 mol O2 cm-3 h-1, while photosynthetic performance ranged from 100 to 130 mol O2 cm-3 h-1. Major increases in photosynthetic pigments, especially peridinin-chlorophyll a-proteins and an unidentified chlorophyll c component, accompanied photoadaptation to low irradiances. Maximal growth rates of 0.3 divisions day-1 were maintained, as were respiration rates of about-80 mol O2 cm-3 h-1 and cell volumes of about 5.4×10-8 cm-3 cell-1. Below about 1250 W cm-2, photosynthesis in G. polyedra was so light-limited that photosynthetic performance was unable to support maximal growth rates. Under these conditions, G. polyedra displayed photostress responses rather than photoadaptive strategies. Photostress was manifested as reduced cell volumes, slower growth, and drastic reductions in pigmentation, photosynthetic capacity, and rates of dark respiration.  相似文献   

6.
The rate of oxygen evolution by the tropical marine cyanobacterium Trichodesmium thiebautii was recorded at different times during the day in samples collected in 1992 from the Bahama Islands and the NE Caribbean Sea. This cyanobacterium is unique in that it is the only non-heterocystous diazotroph capable of N2-fixation in daylight. Oxygen evolution was measured under conditions of natural day/night (LD, N=50), constant light (LL, N=14), and constant dark (DD, N=2×14). Photosynthesis vs intensity (P-I) relationships were calculated at various times of day, and the following parameters were used for further evaluation: photosynthesic capacity (P max, 66 to 91 mg O2 mg chl a -1 h-1), initial slope of the P-I curve (, 0.23 to 0.27), dark respiration (R, 12 to 27 mg O2 mg chl a -1 h-1), and the intensity at which O2 consumption is compensated by O2 production (I c, 78 to 160 Em-2 s-1). All means showed large standard deviations (for some parameters more than 200%). In some cases, these variations could be explained with a sinusoidal 24-h time course, but only the compensation point showed a significant daily variation (p0.001) in both LD and DD. The fact that the time course of I c typical for natural conditions remains rhythmic under constant dark conditions strongly suggests a circadian regulation. Few circadian rhythms have been observed in prokaryotes, and this appears to be the first observation of such a rhythm in a cyanobacterium which fixes N2 in daytime.  相似文献   

7.
A technique for measuring rates of RNA and DNA synthesis in sedimentary microbial communities has been adapted from methods developed for marine and freshwater microplankton research. The procedure measures the uptake, incorporation and turnover of exogenous [2, 3H]-adenine by benthic microbial populations. With minor modification, it is applicable to a wide range of sediment types. Measurement of nucleic acid synthesis rates are reported from selected benthic marine environments, including coral reef sediments (Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, Hawaii), intertidal beach sands (Oahu and southern California) and California borderland basin sediment (San Pedro Basin), and comparisons are made to selected water-column microbial communities. Biomass-specific rates of nucleic acid synthesis in sediment microbial communities were comparable to those observed in water-column assemblages (i.e., 0.02 to 2.0 pmol deoxyadenine incorporated into DNA [ng ATP]-1 h-1 and 0.2 to 8.9 pmol adenine incorporated into RNA [ng ATP]-1 h-1). DNA synthesis rates were used to calculate carbon production estimates ranging from 2 g C cm-3 h-1 in San Pedro Basin sediment (880 m water depth) to 807 g C cm-3 h-1 in coral reef sediment from the Kaneohe Bay. Microbial community specific growth rate, (d-1), estimated from DNA synthesis rates in surface sediments ranged from 0.1 in San Pedro Basin to 4.2 in Scripps Beach (La Jolla, California) intertidal sand.  相似文献   

8.
Colonies of the temperate coral Astrangia danae occur naturally with and without zooxanthellae. Basal nitrogen excretion rates of nonsymbiotic colonies increased with increasing feeding frequency [average excretion rate was 635 ng-at N (mg-at tissue-N)-1 h-1]. Reduced excretion rates of symbiotic colonies were attributed to N uptake by the zooxanthellae. Nitrogen uptake rates of the zooxanthellae averaged 8 ng-at N (106 cells)-1 h-1 in the dark and 21 ng-at N (106 cells)-1 h-1 at 200 Ein m-2 s-1. At these rates the zooxanthellae could provide 54% of the daily basal N requirement of the coral if all of the recycled N was translocated. Basal respiration rates were 172 nmol O2 cm-2 h-1 for starved colonies and 447 nmol O2 cm-2 h-1 for colonies fed three times per week. There were no significant differences between respiration rates of symbiotic and nonsymbiotic colonies. N excretion and respiration rates of fed (symbiotic and nonsymbiotic) colonies increased greatly soon after feeding. N absorption efficiencies decreased with increasing feeding frequency. A N mass balance, constructed for hypothetical situations of nonsymbiotic and symbiotic (3×106 zooxanthellae cm-2) colonies, starved and fed 15 g-at N cm-2wk-1, showed that the presence of symbionts could double the N growth rate of feeding colonies, and reduce the turnover-time of starved ones, but could not provide all of the N requirements of starved colonies. Rates of secondary production, estimated from rates of photosynthesis and respiration were similar to those estimated for reef corals.  相似文献   

9.
Diel patterns of 14C-bicarbonate incorporation in>5 m algal communities were compared with those in cyanobacterial populations of Synechococcus spp. (0.6 to 1.0 m), collected from the surface and/or chlorophyll maximum at three stations in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean (a neritic front; in Warm-Core Eddy 84-E; and Wilkinson's Basin) from 21 July to 8 August, 1984. Cell constituents were chemically separated into four fractions: lipids, low molecular weight (LMW) metabolites, polysaccharides/nucleic acids, and proteins. The in situ diel pattern of 14C assimilation was virtually the same for >5 m algal communities adapted to different environments. Protein synthesis appeared to continue at a reduced rate at night using energy derived from the catabolism of polysaccharides and the mobilization of LMW compounds. Synechococcus spp. populations exhibited inherent physiological differences in their in situ diel pattern of carbon fixation from that in>5 m algal communities taken from the same water mass. There was no nighttime protein-synthesis in Synechococcus spp. The relative proportion of 14C-protein remained constant over night, while that of 14C-polysaccharides/nucleic acids declined and that of labelled LMW metabolites increased. Daytime light-intensity manipulations did not alter the diel pattern of carbon fixation in any of the>5 m algal assemblages, while changes in the carbon metabolism of surface and shadeadapted Synechococcus spp. populations could be rapidly induced by altering the light intensity.Bigelow Laboratory Contribution No. 86004  相似文献   

10.
Rates of respiration and protein synthesis were measured during embryonic and larval development of Antarctic asteroids with different life-history modes (non-feeding and feeding larvae: Acodontaster hodgsoni, Porania antarctica, Odontaster meridionalis). Patterns of respiration for these species all show an increase during embryogenesis, with subsequent maintenance of routine respiration (“starvation resistance”), even in the absence of food for ~4 months (O. meridionalis). Fractional rates of protein synthesis (i.e., rate per unit mass of whole-body protein content) in the Antarctic larvae are essentially identical to those of temperate species. Larvae of O. meridionalis had an average fractional synthesis rate of 0.52% ± 0.05 h−1 at −1.0°C, which is comparable to the temperate asteroid Asterina miniata at 0.53% ± 0.14 h−1 at 15°C. For embryos of the asteroids A. hodgsoni and P. antarctica, fractional rates of protein synthesis (~0.2% h−1) also are comparable to those reported for embryos of temperate echinoderm species. While rates of synthesis are high, rates of protein deposition are relatively low (percent of protein synthesized that is retained for growth). During a ~4 month growth period for larvae of O. meridionalis, the average protein depositional efficiency was 5.2%. This contrasts with higher rates of depositional efficiency reported for similar developmental stages of temperate echinoderm species. The biological significance of maintaining high rates of macromolecular synthesis for species with low rates of cell division and low protein depositional efficiencies is intriguing in the context of understanding the mechanistic bases of extended life spans and dispersal potential in response to changing Antarctic environments.  相似文献   

11.
The estuarine macroalga Enteromorpha prolifera was collected from Coos Bay, Oregon, USA during 1981, and its release of photosynthate as dissolved organic carbon (DOC) was studied using 14C as a tracer. During photosynthesis in 30 S sea water, with a fixation rate averaging 7.37 mg C g-1 dry wt h-1, release ranged from 0.13 to 0.57 mg C g-1 dry wt h-1 and from 1.65 to 6.23% of total fixed carbon. Release of DOC appears to be linear with time over 3 h. As exposed algae become increasingly desiccated, their photosynthetic rates decline dramatically, but upon reimmersion the highly desiccated algae lose a larger fraction of their fixed carbon than the slightly desiccated algae. This loss comes in a pulse release of DOC over the initial 15 min, followed by declining release rates. The pulse loss due to rainfall is 5 times greater than that due to tidal resubmergence, and may briefly exceed the prior photosynthetic rate. Although lowering the salinity from 30 to 5 does not substantially alter photosynthetic rates, it does increase the DOC release range up to 1.02 mg C g-1 dry wt h-1 and 16.10% of fixed carbon. Heterotrophic microbes from the algal habitat readily use the available DOC at about 15% h-1.  相似文献   

12.
In order to examine the effect of light level on the storage lipids of the symbiotic sea anemoneAnemonia virudis (Forskäl), anemones were exposed to three experimental light regimes of 10, 100 and 300 E m-2s-1. Anemones were fed once a week. After 30 d there were no significant differences in the total lipid levels between anemones at any of the light intensities. However, after 60 d lipids had increased in proportion to light level in both the animal-tissue and zooxanthellae compartments. The higher levels of total lipid were in part due to increases in storage lipid (wax esters and triglycerides). Wax ester levels increased in the animal tissues but remained constant in the zooxanthellae, whereas triglycerides increased in both compartments. In contrast to fed anemones, starved anemones which were maintained at 300 E m-2s-1 for 30 or 60 d did not show a statistically significant change in lipid levels at 60 d, although a slight increase in the lipid level was observed. However, there was a significant increase in the storage lipids, which suggested that the non-storage phospholipids and structural lipids had declined as a result of cellular catabolism. The composition of the wax esters and triglycerides of both fed and starved anemones was analysed and compositional changes were observed at higher light intensities.  相似文献   

13.
The nature of protein catabolism in a wide range of species of midwater zooplankton was investigated. The weight-specific ammonia excretion rates (g NH3–N g–1 dry wt h–1, y) decline exponentially with minimum depth of occurreece (MDO, x), y=163.4 x–0.479±0.212 (95%ci) (CI=confidence interval), when temperature is held constant. The change in ammonia excretion can be partially explained by the decrease in percent protein (%P) with MDO, %P=80.17 MDO–0.148±0.122 (95%ci) The atomic O:N ratio of freshly caught zooplankters ranged from 9.1 to 91, with most measurements between 9 and 25. Detailed studies were carried out on the response of one of the species studied (Gnathophausia ingens) to starvation (28 d). After 14 d of starvation the average ammonia excretion rate declined by more than 75% to less than 1 g NH3–N g–1 wet wt h–1, although the average oxygen consumption declined by only 13% within the first 7 d of starvation and then remained stable. This differential response of oxygen consumption and ammonia excretion to starvation resulted in an increase in the average O:N ratio of starved animals from an initial 33 to 165 after 21 d. The average O:N ratios of fed mysids remained below 38 during the experiment. G. ingens maintains a relatively uniform metabolic rate during starvation by relying more heavily on its large lipid stores than when being fed.  相似文献   

14.
Rates of oxygen consumption, ammonia excretion and phosphate excretion were measured on a hydromedusae (Aglantha digitale), pteropods (Limacia helicina, Clione limacina), copepods (Calanus finmarchicus, C. glacialis, C. hyperboreus, Metridia longa), an amphipod (Parathemisto libellula), a euphausiid (Thysanoessa inermis) and a chaetognath (Sagitta elegans), all of which were dominant species in the Barents Sea during early summer 1987. Water and ash contents and elemental composition (C and N) were also analysed on the specimens used in these metabolic experiments. Between species variations were 67.8% to 94.7% of wet weight in water content, 6.4% to 56.5% of dry weight in ash content, 16.7% to 61.0% of dry weight in carbon content, and 4.3% to 11.2% of dry weight in nitrogen content. Oxygen consumption rates ranged from 0.33 to 13.8 l O2 individual-1 h-1, ammonia excretion rates, from 0.0072 to 0.885 gN individual-1 h-1 and phosphate excretion rates, from 0.0036 to 0.33 g P individual-1 h-1. In general, higher rates were associated with larger species, but considerable differences were also seen between species. The ratios between the rates (O : N, N : P, O : P) exhibited a wide species-specific variation, indicating differences in dominant metabolic substrates. Typical protein oriented metabolism was identified only in S. elegans. From the results of metabolic rate measurements and elemental analyses, daily losses of body carbon and nitrogen were estimated to be 0.50 to 4.15% and 0.084 to 1.87%, respectively, showing faster turnover rates of carbon than that of nitrogen. Comparison of daily loss of body carbon of the Barents Sea zooplankton with that of the Antarctic zooplankton indicated reduced rates of the former (63% on average).  相似文献   

15.
The life-history of the crown-of thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) includes a planktotrophic larva that is capable of feeding on particulate food. It has been proposed, however, that particulate food (e.g. microalgae) is scarce in tropical water columns relative to the nutritional requirements of the larvae of A. planci, and that periodic shortages of food play an important role in the biology of this species. It has also been proposed that non-particulate sources of nutrition (e.g. dissolved organic matter, DOM) may fuel part of the nutritional requirements of the larval development of A. planci as well. The present study addresses the ability of A. planci larvae to take up several DOM species and compares rates of DOM uptake to the energy requirements of the larvae. Substrates transported in this study have been previously reported to be transported by larval asteroids from temperate and antarctic waters. Transport rates (per larval A. planci) increased steadily during larval development and some substrates had among the highest mass-specific transport rates ever reported for invertebrate larvae. Maximum transport rates (J max in) for alanine increased from 15.5 pmol larva–1 h–1 (13.2 pmol g–1 h–1) for gastrulas (J max in=38.7 pmol larva–1 h–1 or 47.4 pmol g–1 h–1) to 35.0 pmol larva–1 h–1 (13.1 pmol g–1 h–1) for early brachiolaria (J max in just prior to settlement=350.0 pmol larva–1 h–1 or 161.1 pmol g–1 h–1) at 1 M substrate concentrations. The instantaneous metabolic demand for substrates by gastrula, bipinnaria and brachiolaria stage larvae could be completely satisfied by alanine concentrations of 11, 1.6 and 0.8 M, respectively. Similar rates were measured in this study for the essential amino acid leucine, with rates increasing from 11.0 pmol larva–1 h–1 (or 9.4 pmol g–1 h–1) for gastrulas (J max in=110.5 pmol larva–1 h–1 or 94.4 pmol g–1 h–1) to 34.0 pmol larva–1 h–1 (or 13.0 pmol g–1 h–1) for late brachiolaria (J max in=288.9 pmol larva–1 h–1 or 110.3 pmol g–1 h–1) at 1 M substrate concentrations. The essential amino acid histidine was transported at lower rates (1.6 pmol g–1 h–1 at 1 M for late brachiolaria). Calculation of the energy contribution of the transported species revealed that larvae of A. planci can potentially satisfy 0.6, 18.7, 29.9 and 3.3% of their total energy requirements (instantaneous energy demand plus energy added to larvae as biomass) during embryonic and larval development from external concentrations of 1 M of glucose, alanine, leucine and histidine, respectively. These data demonstrate that a relatively minor component of the DOM pool in seawater (dissolved free amino acids, DFAA) can potentially provide significant amounts of energy for the growth and development of A. planci during larval development.  相似文献   

16.
Silicon and carbon uptake rates were studied over a 24 h light/dark cycle in a synchronised culture of the marine diatom Cylindrotheca fusiformis (Reimann et Lewin) using 32Si and 14C. The silicic acid uptake rate per cell (cSi) varied between 1.2 and 20.0 fmol Si cell–1 h–1 and was closely correlated to the G2+M phase of the cell cycle. A linear and significant relationship was determined between the percentage of cells present in G2+M and cSi. Evolution of the soluble free-silicon pool was studied simultaneously. The concentration of the total soluble free pool of silicon (QPSi) varied from 1% to 7% of the total silicon content. A significant difference of 1.5 fmol Si cell–1 between QPSi and the labelled free pool (QnpSi) was measured, indicating the presence of an unlabelled fraction of the pool. The concentration of QnpSi was around 1.0 fmol Si cell–1 prior to cell division and did not change as a function of cSi, which indicated a feedback mechanism coupling uptake into the free pool and incorporation into the frustule. In parallel, 14C uptake variation (cC) was measured during the division of the population. The value of cC varied between 0.44 and 0.78 pmol C cell–1 h–1 and appeared to be maximal when cells were in the G1 phase. This variation of cC marginally affected the total carbon content of the cells (QTC) in comparison with the light/dark cycle. The variations in the Si/C ratio, from 0.021 to 0.046, demonstrated the different control mechanisms of Si and C metabolisms during the course of the cell- and photocycle.Communicated by S.A. Poulet, Roscoff  相似文献   

17.
Eggs and larvae of the winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus Walbaum were hatched and raised in the laboratory under controlled conditions. Biochemical composition was measured during development and found to be similar to that of other species: 65 to 80 percent protein, 15 to 30 percent fat, and 0 to 5 percent carbohydrate. Ash content was 7 to 10 percent of dry weight. The chorion comprised more than half of the weight of an egg and the data suggested that it was possibly a source of nutrition to the developing embryo. The sequence of utilization appeared to be carbohydrate and then protein to hatching, lipid, mixed lipid and protein, the predominantly protein until feeding began. Carbohydrate was accumulated at first feeding and depleted when growth began. Protein and lipid were deposited in approximately constant proportions. Respiration rates of eggs were low, 0.002–0.015 l O2 egg-1 h-1, but rose gradually from fertilization to hatching. Respiration rates of early larvae were from two to eight times that of eggs (0.033–0.131 l O2 larva-1 h-1). Variation in larval respiration rates indicated a three-fold difference in rate according to level of activity. Eggs excreted ammonia at an increasing rate from fertilization to hatching. Larvae excreted ammonia, primary amines, and other unidentified organic nitrogenous substances. Rates of excretion and proportions of excretory products varied with stage of development. Primary amine excretion was variable and a major component in early stages. Ammonia-N excreted was two to 20 times primary amine N excreted. Unidentified substances were the predominant form of N excretion during early feeding. Ammonia accounted for most of the N excreted in older larvae. Early specific growth rates were 2.1 and 5.5%. Net caloric conversion and net and gross nitrogen efficiencies were low in first feeding larvae compared to adult fishes (32.2, 27.7, and 10.7% respectively).Contribution no. 5071 from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution  相似文献   

18.
B. R. Oates 《Marine Biology》1985,89(2):109-119
Rates of gross photosynthesis for the intertidal saccate alga Colpomenia peregrina (Sauv.) Hamel were determined under submersed and emersed conditions. Maximal photosynthetic rates were lower than for most seaweeds but comparable with other saccate members of the genus. By fitting the data to a hyperbolic tangent function, maximal photosynthetic rates were estimated to be 5.29 mmol CO2 m-2 h-1 under submersed conditions and 2.06 mmol CO2 m-2 h-1 under emersed conditions. Ik for submersed thalli was 69.1 E m-2 s-1, wherea for emersed thalli it was 149.0 E m-2 s-1, or 2.2 times higher. At low tide in the field and under saturating irradiance, carbon from seawater retained within the thallus cavity was assimilated at 0.9 mmol CO2 m-2 h-1. In the laboratory under emersed conditions, carbon from this source was taken up at 0.6 mmol CO2 m-2 h-1 at 20°C and at 0.34 mmol CO2 m-2 h-1. Retained seawater also greatly reduced drying under desiccating conditions. Experimental thalli from which seawater had been removed lost thallus water continuously throughout the drying period (120 min). On the other hand, control, thalli lost water for the first 15 min, after which no further water loss occurred. At the termination of the experiment, control thalli had lost 7.2% of their water, whereas experimental thalli had lost 39.2%. Desiccation affected the emersed photosynthetic rate of experimental and control thalli. Emersed photosynthetic rates for thalli dried for 15 min were higher than for fullyhydrated thalli. However, emersed photosynthesis of thalli dried for longer than 15 min was lower than fully-hydrated rates and was directly related to percent water loss. Utilizing data from this study, a model was constructed to determine total photosynthetic production of C. peregrina over a single daylight period. From these calculations it was determined that emersed photosynthesis can increase daily photosynthetic production of C. peregrina by 50%.  相似文献   

19.
Patterns of phytoplankton carbon (C) metabolism were examined in å combined laboratory and field study to assess the influence of light conditions on 14C assimilation into photosynthetic end-products. Laboratory studies with three species representing distinct size classes and taxonomic groups tested the influence of low light on patterns of C flow. Prorocentrum mariae-lebouriae (dinoflagellate) and Ditylum brightwellii (diatom) showed decreased movement of photoassimilated 14C into protein following a shift to low light 14C assimilation into lipids and photosynthetic pigments increased in low light and was paralleled by increased chl a per cell. The proportion of 14C fixed into protein returned to the pre-shift level upon return to initial light conditions. Monochrysis lutheri (chrysophyte) did not show this pattern of reduced % 14C protein. Incubations of 12 and 24 h demonstrated significant rearrangements in labeling patterns at night, wherein 14C flow into protein in darkness was favored. % 14C protein at night was lower for M. lutheri than for the other species, suggesting some interspecific differences in the low light response. Measurements of 14C assimilation in phytoplankton assemblages from Chesapeake Bay demonstrated movement of a higher proportion of photo-assimilated C into protein in samples collected in the surface mixed layer than in those below the pycnocline. In comparison, phytoplankton collected below the pycnocline fixed a higher proportion of 14C into lipids, photosynthetic pigments, and low molecular weight metabolites, as was observed in low light laboratory cultures. A comparison of 12- and 24-h incubations for measuring patterns of C flow into photosynthetic end-products confirmed the inadequacy of short-term measurements, as significant changes in 14C allocation occurred in the dark phase of the photocycle. Together, these results suggest that 14C assimilation into photosynthetic end-products can be a useful measure of adaptive state in changing light conditions, but point out some difficulties in applying this approach in situ.  相似文献   

20.
Orthophosphate (P) uptake on a seasonal basis in surface waters and in vertical profiles was directly proportional to the standing stocks of phytoplankton and bacterioplankton in the outer Los Angeles Harbor and in southern California coastal waters during 1978–1979. A phytoplankton-enriched size fraction (PEF) which was retained on a 1 m pore-size filter contained 83% of the total chlorophyll a but only 18% of the total bacteria. A bacterioplankton-enriched size fraction (BEF) which passed the 1 m filter but was retained on a 0.2 m filter contained 82% of the total bacteria but only 17% of the total chlorophyll a. PEF and BEF accounted for 91 and 9% of the microbial carbon, respectively. The differential uptake of 10 radiolabeled substrates more fully characterized PEF and BEF. 33P uptake occurred in both PEF and BEF, accounting for 47 and 53%, respectively, of the total uptake. 33P uptake by both size fractions was inhibited by low concentrations of 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP), N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and carbonyl cyanide, m-chlorophenylhydrozone (CCCP). Darkness and low levels of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) selectively inhibited 33P uptake by PEF; valinomycin selectively inhibited 33P uptake by BEF. An experiment measuring 33P uptake velocity versus P concentration produced sigmoidal saturation kinetics at high levels of exogenous P. Kinetic parameter analyses according to the Hill equation gave a V max of 7.12 nmol l–1 h–1 and aK t of 0.41 nmol l–1 for PEF, and a V max of 5.17 nmol l–1 h–1 and aK t of 112 nmol l–1 for BEF. Consideration of relative surface areas of phytoplankton and bacterioplankton, their 33P uptake rates in light and dark, and estimates of the population turnover times emphasizes the potential importance of bacterioplankton in community phosphorus metabolism.  相似文献   

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