4.6 Article

A comparison of N and C uptake during brown tide (Aureococcus anophagefferens) blooms from two coastal bays on the east coast of the USA

Journal

HARMFUL ALGAE
Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages 361-376

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.hal.2004.06.007

Keywords

Aureococcus anophagefferens; dissolved inorganic N; N uptake; C uptake; peptide hydrolysis

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Blooms of the brown tide pelagophyte, Aureococcus anophagefferens, have been reported in coastal bays along the east coast of the USA for nearly two decades. Blooms appear-to be constrained to shallow bays that have low flushing rates, little riverine input and high salinities (e.g., >28). Nutrient enrichment and coastal eutrophication has been most frequently implicated as the cause of A. anophagefferens and other blooms in coastal bays. We compare N and C dynamics during two brown tide blooms, one in Quantuck Bay, on Long Island, NY in 2000, and the other in Chincoteague Bay, at Public Landing, MD in 2002, with a physically similar site in Chincoteague Bay that did not experience a bloom. We found that the primary forms of nitrogen (N) taken up during the bloom in Quantuck Bay were ammonium and dissolved free amino acids (DFAA) while the primary form of N fueling production at both sites in Chincoteague Bay was urea. At both Chincoteague sites, amino acid carbon (C) was taken up while urea C was not. Even though A. anophagefferens has the ability to take up organic C, during the bloom at Chincoteague Bay, photosynthetic uptake of bicarbonate was the dominant pathway of C acquisition by the >1.2 alpham size fraction during the day. C uptake by cells <5.0 alpham was insufficient to meet cellular C demand based on the measured N uptake rates and the C:N ratio of particulate material. While cells >1.2 alpham did not take up much organic C during the day, smaller cells (>0.2 alpham) did. Peptide hydrolysis appeared to play an important role in mobilizing organic matter in Quantuck Bay, where amino acids contributed substantially to N and C uptake, but not in Chincoteague Bay. Dissolved organic N (DON), dissolved organic C (DOC) concentrations and the DOC/DON ratio were higher and total dissolved inorganic N (DIN) concentrations were lower at the bloom site in Chincoteague Bay than at the nonbloom site in the same bay. We conclude that A. anophagefferens is capable of using a wide variety of N and C compounds, and that nutrient inputs, biotic interactions and the dominant recycling pathways determine which compounds are available and which metabolic pathways are active at a particular site. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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