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ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE IN FRESHWATER CLADOPHORA ‐EPIPHYTE ASSEMBLAGES: REGULATION IN RESPONSE TO PHOSPHORUS SUPPLY AND LOCALIZATION 1
Author(s) -
Young Erica B.,
Tucker Rebecca C.,
Pansch Lori A.
Publication year - 2010
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.1529-8817.2009.00782.x
Subject(s) - cladophora , biology , epiphyte , algae , phosphorus , ecology , botany , cyanobacteria , environmental chemistry , chemistry , bacteria , genetics , organic chemistry
Extracellular alkaline phosphatase enzyme activity (APA) is important for algal phosphorus (P) acquisition in P‐limited freshwater ecosystems and is often used as an indicator of P deficiency. APA allows access to organic P (monophosphate esters), but the regulation of APA in response to availability of both PO 4 3− and organic P is poorly characterized. This study aimed to examine the regulation of APA in freshwater Cladophora ‐epiphyte assemblages in response to PO 4 3− and a hydrolyzable organic P source, and for the first time to apply enzyme linked fluorescence (ELF) to localize APA within freshwater macroalgal‐epiphyte assemblages. In response to elevated PO 4 3− concentrations, a component of net APA was suppressed, but there was also a constitutive APA, which was maintained even after prolonged exposure to nearly 1,000 μM PO 4 3− and saturation of internal P pools. When supplied with organic glycerol P as the sole P source, the algae maintained APA in excess of needs for supplying PO 4 3− for uptake, resulting in PO 4 3− release into the medium. Constitutive APA may be adaptive to growth under chronic P limitation in oligotrophic freshwater habitats. Excess APA and release of PO 4 3− could benefit different algal and bacterial partners within assemblages. APA in both Cladophora sp. and epiphytic algae was localized with ELF only when ethanol fixation was omitted. In algal subsamples exposed to different P treatments, there was no correlation between bulk APA (using 4‐methylumbelliferyl phosphate [MUP] substrate) and % cell labeling with ELF, suggesting that ELF labeling of APA was at best semiquantitative in the algal assemblages.