4.6 Article

UV radiation and phosphorus interact to influence the biochemical composition of phytoplankton

Journal

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 6, Pages 1233-1245

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2009.02170.x

Keywords

essential fatty acids; food quality; phosphorus; seston; UV radiation

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministries of Environment [PN2003/25]
  2. Education and Science [GL2005/01564/BOS]
  3. Foreign Affairs and Cooperation [AECI 0562]

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1. Numerous laboratory studies have shown that food quality is suboptimal for zooplankton growth. However, little is known about how food quality is affected by the interaction of potential global change factors in natural conditions. Using field enclosures in a high altitude Spanish lake, seston was exposed to increasing phosphorus (P) concentrations in the absence and presence of UV radiation (UVR) to test the hypothesis that interactions between these factors affected the biochemical and stoichiometric composition of seston in ways not easily predicted from studies of single factors. 2. Phosphorus enrichment increased the content of total fatty acids (TFA), omega 3-polyunsaturated fatty acids (omega 3-PUFA) and chlorophyll-a : carbon (Chl-a : C) and C : N ratios in seston. The pronounced increase in omega 3-PUFA was largely explained by the enhancement of 18:3n-3 (alpha-linolenic acid). In contrast, P-enrichment lowered the content of highly unsaturated fatty acids (HUFA), the HUFA : PUFA ratio and, at high P loads, seston C : P ratio. Although phytoplankton assemblages dominated by Chlorophytes were not rich in HUFA, seston in the control had substantially higher 20:4n-6 (arachidonic acid, ARA) content (79% of HUFA) than did P-enriched enclosures. 3. The UVR increased the content of omega 3-PUFA and TFA in seston at the two ends of the trophic gradient generated at ambient and high concentrations of P, but decreased seston C : P and HUFA at all points on this gradient. ARA was not detected in the presence of UVR. 4. The interaction between P and UVR was significant for seston HUFA and C : P ratios, indicating that the effect of UVR in reducing HUFA (decreased food quality) and C : P ratios (enhanced food quality) was most pronounced at the low nutrient concentrations characteristic of oligotrophic conditions and disappeared as P increased. Therefore, any future increase in UVR fluxes will probably affect most strongly the food quality of algae inhabiting oligotrophic pristine waters although, at least in the Mediterranean region, these effects could be offset by greater deposition of P from the atmosphere.

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