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Metabolism and resources of spherical colonies of Nostoc zetterstedtii
Author(s) -
Sand-Jensen Kaj,
Raun Ane Løvendahl,
Borum Jens
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
limnology and oceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 197
eISSN - 1939-5590
pISSN - 0024-3590
DOI - 10.4319/lo.2009.54.4.1282
Subject(s) - nostoc , photosynthesis , cyanobacteria , irradiance , botany , respiration , algae , eutrophication , biology , environmental chemistry , ecology , nutrient , chemistry , physics , bacteria , genetics , quantum mechanics
Constraints imposed by the spherical form and gelatinous matrix of centimeter‐thick colonies of the cyanobacterium Nostoc zetterstedtii on its functional properties were tested by examining the scaling of its composition, light absorption, photosynthesis, and respiration to individual size. In three summer experiments with colonies collected from the bottom of oligotrophic lakes of low inorganic carbon concentrations (dissolved inorganic C, DIC), metabolism and pigment density of colonies were scaled to their surface area as most algal filaments were confined to a 2‐mm‐thick outer shell. Nostoc absorbed 96% of incident light from the surface to the center because of high areal pigment density, but absorbed photons were used with low quantum efficiency (11–38 mmol O 2 mol −1 photon) and photosynthesis was low relative to dark respiration (2.0–5.4). Therefore, N. zetterstedtii is threatened by reduced light availability and only extended to lake depths receiving about 12% of surface irradiance, whereas mosses, characeans, and angiosperms with thin photosynthetic tissues grew deeper (3.1–7.5% of surface irradiance). Nostoc ameliorated the restrictions of low lake DIC and long diffusion paths by active transport that could extract most external DIC, accumulate DIC in the colony 150–fold above external concentrations, and retain respiratory CO 2 . The energy cost of solute transport and gel formation in Nostoc colonies and extensive self shading restrict their potential growth, whereas colony formation should prevent grazing and increase longevity and nutrient recirculation. Nostoc zetterstedtii has become one of rarest freshwater macroalgae because of widespread lake eutrophication reducing water transparency and increasing competition from taller and faster‐growing stands of filamentous algae and higher plants.

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