Ammonium and nitrate uptake by leaves of the seagrass Thalassia testudinum: impact of hydrodynamic regime and epiphyte cover on uptake rates
Seagrasses rely on the uptake of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) from both sediment pore water and the water column for metabolic processes. Rates at which their leaves remove nutrients from the water column may be influenced by physiological factors, such as enzyme kinetics, and physical factors...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of marine systems 2004-08, Vol.49 (1), p.177-194 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Seagrasses rely on the uptake of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) from both sediment pore water and the water column for metabolic processes. Rates at which their leaves remove nutrients from the water column may be influenced by physiological factors, such as enzyme kinetics, and physical factors, including water flow and the presence of epiphytes on the leaf surface. While there is some evidence of the individual effects of these factors on uptake rates for individual plants, there is little information on the effects of these factors on seagrasses that are situated in their natural environment. In order to isolate the combined effects of water flow and epiphyte cover on uptake rates for
Thalassia testudinum leaves while they were situated in a natural canopy we applied
15N-labeled ammonium and
15N-labeled nitrate in a series of field flume experiments. Hydrodynamic parameters related to thickness of diffusive boundary layers, including bottom shear stress and the rate of turbulent energy dissipation, were estimated from velocity profiles collected with an acoustic Doppler velocimeter. Rates of NH
4
+ uptake for leaves with and without epiphyte cover were proportional to bottom shear stress and energy dissipation rate, while rates of NO
3
− uptake were not. For epiphytes, rates of both NH
4
+ and NO
3
− uptake were dependent on hydrodynamic parameters. Epiphytes covering the leaf surface reduced rates of NH
4
+ uptake for seagrass leaves by an amount proportional to the spatial area covered by the epiphytes (∼90%) and although epiphytes reduced NO
3
− uptake rates, the amount was not proportional to the extent of epiphyte cover. Results suggest that the rate at which seagrass leaves removed ammonium was limited by the rate of delivery to the surface of the leaves and was greatly reduced due to blockage of active uptake sites by epiphytes. Conversely, rates of nitrate uptake for the seagrass leaves were limited by the rate at which the leaves could process nitrate rather than the rate of delivery. Our findings quantitatively demonstrate the potential impact of hydrodynamic regime and epiphyte cover on rates of DIN uptake by
T. testudinum leaves and how the importance of these factors in affecting uptake rates can vary depending on the form of DIN being assimilated. |
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ISSN: | 0924-7963 1879-1573 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jmarsys.2003.05.008 |