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Comparative adaptations of Aphanizomenon and Anabaena for nitrogen fixation under weak irradiance
Author(s) -
BRADBURN MARK J.,
LEWIS WILLIAM M.,
McCUTCHAN JAMES H.
Publication year - 2012
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.1365-2427.2012.02765.x
Subject(s) - aphanizomenon , biology , irradiance , nitrogen fixation , botany , darkness , anabaena , photoinhibition , nitrogen , photosynthesis , ecology , cyanobacteria , chemistry , photosystem ii , physics , bacteria , genetics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Summary 1.  In situ measurements of nitrogen fixation rates for Aphanizomenon in fertile Colorado lakes with low inorganic nitrogen concentrations demonstrated high efficiency of nitrogen fixation at low irradiance. 2. For study populations, rates of N 2 fixation in darkness and with alternating exposure to light and darkness were a higher percentage of light‐saturated rates for Aphanizomenon than for Anabaena , suggesting storage of reduced metabolites at high irradiance that are used subsequently by Aphanizomenon when cells are forced by mixing into zones of low irradiance. Also, saturation of N 2 fixation occurred over a lower range of irradiance for Aphanizomenon than for Anabaena . 3. High efficiency of N 2 fixation in Aphanizomenon at low or fluctuating irradiance is complementary to its previously demonstrated high efficiency of photosynthesis at low irradiance. Nitrogen fixation rate was also strongly related to DIN concentration; fixation was highest at low DIN (maximum < 5 μg L −1 ) but was also most vulnerable to photoinhibition under such conditions. 4. The fixation capabilities of Aphanizomenon under weak or varying irradiance could explain its commonly observed domination over Anabaena when transparency is low and available nitrogen is scarce.

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