4.0 Article

Photosynthetic efficiency, cell volume, and elemental stoichiometric ratios in Thalassirosira weissflogii under phosphorus limitation

Journal

CHINESE JOURNAL OF OCEANOLOGY AND LIMNOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 1048-1056

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s00343-011-0224-2

Keywords

phosphorus; diatom; physiological responses; PAM; elemental ratio

Funding

  1. CAS [KZCX2-YW-JS206]
  2. CAS/SAFEA [KZCX2-YW-T001]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41076096, 40828006, U1033003]
  4. Guangdong Natural Science Fund [2010B031900039]

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Nutrient limitation is known to inhibit growth and metabolism and to alter elemental stoichiometric ratios in phytoplankton. In this study, physiological changes in Thalassirosira weissflogii were measured under different dissolved inorganic phosphate (DIP) regimes in semi-continuous cultures to revisit the utility of the Redfield ratio for assessing nutrient limitation. The results showed that cell size increased with decreasing DIP availability. In the P-depleted treatment (f/2-P) the cell size was 1.48 times larger than that in the P-limited (f/100) treatment and 2.67 times larger than that in the P-saturated treatment (f/2 and f/10). The fucoxanthin to chlorophyll a ratio (Fuco/chl a) was relatively stable (about 0.3) in P-saturated cultures and was 10 times higher than that in P-limited and P-depleted cultures. During the experimental period, the photosynthetic efficiency index, Delta F/F (m) ', was relatively stable at similar to 0.50 in the P-saturated cultures, but quickly declined with decreasing DIP availability. Although cellular P content showed a significant difference between the P-saturated culture (1.6 pg/cell) and the P-limited culture (0.7 pg/cell), the N/P ratio in T. weissflogii did not show a trend with DIP availability and fluctuated slightly around 25. Our results suggest that cell division in T. weissflogii is not strictly size-gated but is probably regulated by a biochemical, and hence, an elemental stoichiometric ratio threshold, and that deviation of the cellular N/P ratio from the Redfield ratio is not a reliable indicator of algal nutrient stress.

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