Journal
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 3, Issue 8, Pages 429-439Publisher
ROYAL SOCIETY
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2005.0106
Keywords
phytoplankton sinking; sedimentation column; Percoll gradient; cyanobacteria; Planktothrix rubescens
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Two particular difficulties in measuring the sinking velocities of phytoplankton cells are preventing convection within the sedimenting medium and determining the changing depth of the cells. These problems are overcome by using a density-stabilized sedimentation column scanned by a laser. For freshwater species, a suspension of phytoplankton is layered over a vertical density gradient of Percoll solution; as the cells sink down the column their relative concentration is measured by the forward scattering of light from a laser beam that repeatedly scans up and down the column. The Percoll gradient stabilizes the column, preventing vertical mixing by convection, radiation or perturbation of density by the descending cells. Measurements were made on suspensions of 15 mm polystyrene microspheres with a density of 1050 kg m(-3); the mean velocity was 6.28 mu m s(-1), within 1.5% of that calculated by the Stokes equation, 6.36 mu m s(-1). Measurements made on the filamentous cyanobacterium Planktothrix rubescens gave mean velocities within the theoretical range of values based on the range of size, shape, orientation and density of the particles in a modified Stokes equation. Measurements on marine phytoplankton may require density gradients prepared with other substances.
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