4.2 Article

The effects of velocity and nitrate on Phormidium accrual cycles: a stream mesocosm experiment

Journal

FRESHWATER SCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 496-509

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/699204

Keywords

Phormidium; nitrate; velocity; accrual cycles; patch expansion; sloughing

Funding

  1. Ngai Tahu Research Centre
  2. Meadow Mushrooms
  3. Environment Canterbury
  4. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd. under the Causes and Effects of Water Quality Degradation: Eutrophication Risk Assessment Programme

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Proliferations of benthic cyanobacteria in the genus Phormidium are a global concern because of their increasing prevalence and ability to produce harmful toxins. Most studies have been observational and have linked physicochemical variables to Phormidium cover measured at the reach scale. Authors of these studies have alluded to nutrients and flow as key factors in accrual. Our goal was to use an experimental approach to examine how changes in velocity and NO 3(-) concentrations influence Phormidium accrual. We hypothesized that: 1) Phormidium biomass accrual would be positively correlated with stream velocity; 2) biomass accrual would be positively related to NO3- concentration, which would have a stronger effect during early accrual; 3) an NO3- x velocity interaction would arise from saturation of accrual at high NO3- and high velocity; and 4) the probability of detachment would increase with decreasing velocity. We assessed mat expansion, biomass (as phycoerythrin and chlorophyll alpha [Chl alpha] concentrations, and biovolume), and algal assemblage composition in flow-through channel mesocosms for 16 d. We crossed 2 velocity treatments (0.1 and 0.2 m/s, slow and fast, respectively) with 3 NO3 treatments (0.02, 0.1, and 0.4 mg/L, ambient, medium, and high, respectively). Velocity was positively correlated with all measures of Phormidium biomass, but patch expansion rates increased at similar rates across all treatments. NO3- had no effect during early accrual, but phycoerythrin concentrations increased with increasing NO3- in fast-velocity treatments. At the end of the experiment, patch size was greater in the high-velocity treatments because of a greater number of partial or full patch detachments in slow-velocity treatments. These results suggest that NO3- concentrations do not affect Phormidium expansion and detachment, but may be important during colonization (not investigated), and that mat expansion occurs at a similar rate regardless of velocity, but termination of accrual cycles occurs earlier in slow velocities.

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