Phosphate concentrations in lakes
Phosphate is an important nutrient that restricts microbial production in many freshwater and marine environments. The actual concentration of phosphate in phosphorus-limited waters is largely unknown because commonly used chemical and radiochemical techniques overestimate the concentration. Here, u...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2000-07, Vol.406 (6791), p.54-56 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Phosphate is an important nutrient that restricts microbial production
in many freshwater and marine environments.
The actual concentration of phosphate in phosphorus-limited waters is largely
unknown because commonly used chemical and radiochemical techniques overestimate
the concentration. Here, using a new steady-state radiobioassay
to survey a diverse set of lakes, we report phosphate concentrations in lakes
that are orders of magnitude lower than estimates made spectrophotometrically
or with the frequently used Rigler radiobioassay. Our results, combined with
those from the literature, indicate that microbes can achieve rapid turnover
rates at picomolar nutrient concentrations. This occurs even though these
concentrations are about two orders of magnitude below the level where phosphate
uptake is estimated to be half the saturation level for the picoplankton community.
Also, while phosphate concentration increased with the concentration of total
phosphorus and soluble reactive phosphorus in the lakes we sampled, the proportion
of phosphate in the total phosphorus pool decreased from oligotrophic to eutrophic
lakes. Such information, as revealed by the phosphate assay that we use here,
should allow us to address hypotheses concerning the concentration of phosphate
available to planktonic microorganisms in aquatic systems. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/35017531 |