4.2 Article

Elemental quotas and physiology of a southwestern Pacific Ocean plankton community as a function of iron availability

Journal

AQUATIC MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue 3, Pages 185-194

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/ame01611

Keywords

Cellular iron quotas; Phytoplankton; Marine biogeochemistry

Funding

  1. New Zealand's Coasts and Oceans OBI program
  2. Australian Research Council
  3. US National Science Foundation [OCE 0825379/0825405/0825319]
  4. US DOE [DE-AC02-06CH11357]

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The rate of carbon fixation by phytoplankton in marine surface waters is often tied to the supply of growth-limiting nutrients such as iron (Fe). While average cellular requirements and ratios for various elements are well known in the literature, especially through laboratory culture work, the plasticity of these relationships in natural plankton communities has been less explored. To gauge how changes in the biological availability of dissolved Fe might influence cellular nutrient ratios of marine phytoplankton (and thus their physiology), we carried out incubation assays during a research expedition off the east coast of New Zealand. Trace-metal clean collection of plankton communities were amended with a continuum of concentrations of either Fe (as FeCl3) or desferroxamine B (to reduce bioavailable Fe) and then maintained for 72 h under in situ conditions. Along with standard assays (F-v/F-m, chlorophyll, nutrient drawdown), we measured elemental ratios in the bulk community by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and within individual plankton using synchrotron X-ray fluorescence. Our observations demonstrate that changes in the physiological ecology of the community (biomass, photosynthetic efficiency) were mirrored in changes in elemental ratios, including a 3-fold change in Fe stoichiometry and a 13-fold change in Zn stoichiometry when Fe-replete and Fe-depleted communities were compared. We present this information in consideration of the hypothesis that flexibility in elemental quotas influences the interactions between nutrient availability and planktonic physiological status, subsequently altering C flow through marine surface waters. [GRAPHICS] .

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