Literature DB >> 29937577

Taxon-specific contributions to silica production in natural diatom assemblages.

Heather M McNair1, Mark A Brzezinski1,2, Claire P Till3, Jeffrey W Krause2,4,5.   

Abstract

The metabolic activity and growth of phytoplankton taxa drives their eclass="Chemical">cological function and class="Chemical">pan class="Chemical">contribution to biogeochemical processes. We present the first quantitative, taxon-resolved silica production rates, growth rates, and silica content estimates for co-occurring diatoms along two cross-shelf transects off the California coast using the fluorescent tracer PDMPO (2-(4-pyridyl)-5-((4-(2-dimethylaminoethylaminocarbamoyl)methoxy)phenyl)oxazole), and confocal microscopy. Taxon contribution to total diatom community silica production was predominantly a function of the surface area of new frustule that each taxon created as opposed to cell abundance or frustule thickness. The influential role of surface area made large diatoms disproportionately important to community silica production over short time scales (<1 d). In some cases, large taxa that comprised only ~15% of numerical cell abundance accounted for over 50% of total community silica production. Over longer time scales relevant to bloom dynamics, the importance of surface area declines and growth rate becomes the dominant influence on contribution to production. The relative importance of surface area and growth rate in relation to silica production was modeled as the time needed for a smaller, faster-growing taxon to create more surface area than a larger, slower-growing taxon. Differences in growth rate between the taxa effected the model outcome more than differences in surface area. Shifts in relative silica production among taxa are time restricted by finite resources that limit the duration of a bloom. These patterns offer clues as to how taxa respond to their environment and the consequences for both species succession and the potential diatom contribution to elemental cycling.

Entities:  

Keywords:  PDMPO; cell morphology; silica production

Year:  2017        PMID: 29937577      PMCID: PMC6007990          DOI: 10.1002/lno.10754

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Limnol Oceanogr        ISSN: 0024-3590            Impact factor:   4.745


  13 in total

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Review 7.  Diatom elemental and morphological changes in response to iron limitation: a brief review with potential paleoceanographic applications.

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10.  Thick-shelled, grazer-protected diatoms decouple ocean carbon and silicon cycles in the iron-limited Antarctic Circumpolar Current.

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1.  Diatom populations in an upwelling environment decrease silica content to avoid growth limitation.

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