4.7 Article

Effects of major nutrient additions on metal uptake in phytoplankton

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 111, Issue 2, Pages 233-240

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0269-7491(00)00071-3

Keywords

cadmium; nutrients; phytoplankton; selenium; zinc; uptake

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We examined the influences of major nutrients (N, P, Si) on the accumulation of three trace metals [Cd, Se(IV), and Zn] in four species of marine phytoplankton (diatom, green alga, dinoflagellate, prasinophyte). Relative metal uptake was quantified by the kinetic measurements of metal concentration factor over a short exposure period. Our study demonstrated that nutrient addition significantly influenced the metal uptake rate and the cell growth rate in all four phytoplankton species. An increase in ambient N concentration considerably enhanced metal uptake by the cells. The dry weight concentration factor increased by 2.4-14.9 times for Cd, 1.1-4.0 times for Se, and 1.1-5.4 times for Zn in all four phytoplankton species with an addition of 176.4 muM N. The effects of P or Si addition on metal uptake and cell growth were less pronounced than the effects of N addition. Under most circumstances the rate of metal uptake increased exponentially with increasing cell growth rate constant. Only Se(IV) uptake in the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum was not correlated with cell growth rate. Se(IV) was not accumulated by the green algae Chlorella autotrophica at a high P concentration (7.2 muM), but appreciable accumulation was documented in cells inoculated without P addition. Our study therefore demonstrated that nutrient enrichments in many coastal waters can considerably affect trace metal uptake in phytoplankton and presumably metal trophic transfer in marine food chains. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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