DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps292147
copiedResponse of Enteromorpha sp. (Chlorophyceae) to a nitrate pulse: nitrate uptake, inorganic nitrogen storage and nitrate reductase activity
ABSTRACT: The uptake, storage and reduction of nitrate (NO3) by Enteromorpha sp. during a NO3 pulse was studied in the laboratory using algae collected from the Mobile Bay estuary, Alabama,USA. Peak uptake occurred when Enteromorpha sp. was initially exposed to NO3. As the internal NO3 pool filled, NO3 uptake declined. After 6 h of exposure to a 30µM NO3 pulse, the tissue NO3 pool was filled and NO3 uptake decreased to 1.64 ± 2.63 µmol NO3 g1 fresh wth1. While tissue NO3 increased when NO3 became available, the size of the internal nitrite (NO2), ammonium (NH4+), and free aminoacid (FAA) pools remained roughly constant, suggesting that reduction of NO3 to nitrite (NO2) by nitrate reductase (NR) was the rate-limiting step in NO3 assimilation.Meanwhile, there was a lag time (2 to 3 h) between exposure to NO3 and peak NR activity (0.80 ± 0.23 µmol NO2 g1 fresh wt h1). These characteristics,combined with a peak NR activity that was 11-fold less than the peak NO3 uptake rate, suggest that during a NO3 pulse the internal NO3 pool quickly fills and uptakebecomes limited by the rate at which the internal NO3 pool is reduced by NR. Predicted levels of tissue NO3 calculated from initial tissue NO3,NO3 uptake and NR activity agreed with the measured tissue NO3.
KEYWORDS
Julien Lartigue (Corresponding Author)
- Dauphin Island Sea Lab, 101 Bienville Boulevard, Dauphin Island, Alabama 36528, USA
- Department of Marine Sciences, University of South Alabama, LSCB-25, Mobile, Alabama 36688, USA
Timothy D. Sherman (Co-author)
- Department of Biology, Universityof South Alabama, LSCB-124, Mobile, Alabama 36688, USA
