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Do cyanobacteria dominate in eutrophic lakes because they fix atmospheric nitrogen?
Author(s) -
Ferber L. R.,
Levine S. N.,
Lini A.,
Livingston G. P.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
freshwater biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.297
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1365-2427
pISSN - 0046-5070
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2004.01218.x
Subject(s) - phytoplankton , eutrophication , cyanobacteria , nitrate , ammonium , nitrogen , environmental chemistry , nitrogen fixation , algae , benthic zone , environmental science , trichodesmium , ecology , nutrient , biology , chemistry , diazotroph , genetics , organic chemistry , bacteria
Summary 1. The sources of nitrogen for phytoplankton were determined for a bloom‐prone lake as a means of assessing the hypothesis that cyanobacteria dominate in eutrophic lakes because of their ability to fix nitrogen when the nitrogen : phosphorous (N : P) supply ratio is low and nitrogen a limiting resource. 2. Nitrogen fixation rates, estimated through acetylene reduction with 15 N calibration, were compared with 15 N‐tracer estimates of ammonium and nitrate uptake monthly during the ice‐free season of 1999. In addition, the natural N stable isotope composition of phytoplankton, nitrate and ammonium were measured biweekly and the contribution of N 2 to the phytoplankton signature estimated with a mixing model. 3. Although cyanobacteria made up 81–98% of phytoplankton biomass during summer and autumn, both assays suggested minimal N acquisition through fixation (<9% for the in‐situ incubations; <2% for stable isotope analysis). Phytoplankton acquired N primarily as ammonium (82–98%), and secondarily as nitrate (15–18% in spring and autumn, but <5% in summer). Heterocyst densities of <3 per 100 fixer cells confirmed low reliance on fixation. 4. The lake showed symptoms of both light and nitrogen limitation. Cyanobacteria may have dominated by monopolizing benthic sources of ammonium, or by forming surface scums that shaded other algae.

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