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USE OF PULSE‐AMPLITUDE‐MODULATED FLUORESCENCE TO ASSESS THE PHYSIOLOGICAL STATUS OF CLADOPHORA SP. ALONG A WATER QUALITY GRADIENT 1
Author(s) -
HiriartBaer Véronique P.,
Arciszewski Tim J.,
Malkin Sairah Y.,
Guildford Stephanie J.,
Hecky Robert E.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of phycology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.85
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1529-8817
pISSN - 0022-3646
DOI - 10.1111/j.1529-8817.2008.00588.x
Subject(s) - cladophora , biology , nutrient , benthic zone , algae , light intensity , phytoplankton , irradiance , photoinhibition , photosynthesis , botany , ecology , photosystem ii , physics , quantum mechanics , optics
This study investigated the application of pulse‐amplitude‐modulated (PAM) fluorometry as a rapid assessment of benthic macroalgal physiological status. Maximum quantum efficiency ( F v / F m ), dark–light induction curves, and rapid fluorescence light‐response curves (RLC) were measured on the filamentous macroalgal Cladophora sp. from Lake Ontario on 5 d at 16 sites spanning a gradient of light and nutrient supply. For Cladophora sp. growing in situ, light limitation was assessed by comparing average daily irradiance with the light utilization efficiency parameter (α) derived from RLCs. In this study, there was a nonlinear relationship between F v / F m and the degree of P limitation in macroalgae. However, only light‐saturated Cladophora sp. showed a significant positive linear relationship between F v / F m and P nutrient status. The absence of this relationship among light‐limited algae indicates that their photosynthetic rate would be stimulated by increased water clarity, and not by increased P supply. PAM fluorescence measures were successfully able to identify light‐saturated macroalgae and, among these, assess the degree to which they were nutrient limited. These results enable us to test hypotheses arising from numeric models predicting the impact of changes in light penetration and nutrient supply on benthic primary production.