Bloom formation in heterocystic nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria: The dependence on colony size and zooplankton grazing

被引:59
作者
Chan, F [1 ]
Pace, ML [1 ]
Howarth, RW [1 ]
Marino, RM [1 ]
机构
[1] Cornell Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
关键词
D O I
10.4319/lo.2004.49.6.2171
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The success of filamentous nitrogen (N)-fixing cyanobacteria in productive, transiently N-limited freshwaters reflects, in large part, their ability to produce and sustain the activities of specialized N-fixing heterocyst cells. Heterocyst production is variable, and the responses of planktonic cyanobacterial blooms to N limitation differ markedly among systems. Temporal variations in cyanobacteria colony size may determine both heterocyst production and sensitivity to top-down control by zooplankton grazers. We promoted the development of cyanobacterial blooms through phosphorus additions and trophic manipulations in freshwater ponds, to test the role of colony size structure in regulating N-fixer bloom development. The in situ growth and heterocyst production of Anabaena spp. were strongly linked to variations in colonial filament size. Anabaena spp. initially recruited to the water column as short and poorly heterocysted filaments, exhibiting low (mean = 0.09 d(-1)) rates of population growth. The growth rate increased by more than fourfold (mean = 0.39 d(-1)) with the onset of colony elongation and heterocyst production, which resulted in rapid seasonal build-ups of cyanobacterial cells (>10(5) cells ml(-1)). Size-dependent growth was also important in determining the outcome of zooplankton-cyanobacteria interactions. In microcosm experiments, zooplankton consumers directly grazed on Anabaena spp. colonies, reduced the mean filament size, and reduced the efficiency with which heterocysts fixed nitrogen. These results suggest that colony size is a fundamental mechanism that link cellular physiological constraints to variations in trophic controls and the responses of aquatic systems to N limitation.
引用
收藏
页码:2171 / 2178
页数:8
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]   Temporal variance in lake communities: blue-green algae and the trophic cascade [J].
Carpenter, Stephen R. .
LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 1989, 3 (3-4) :175-184
[2]  
CHAN F, 2001, THESIS CORNELL U
[3]   Effect of temperature on photosynthesis-light response and growth of four phytoplankton species isolated from a tidal freshwater river [J].
Coles, JF ;
Jones, RC .
JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, 2000, 36 (01) :7-16
[4]   Pelagic C:N:P stoichiometry in a eutrophied lake:: Responses to a whole-lake food-web manipulation [J].
Elser, JJ ;
Sterner, RW ;
Galford, AE ;
Chrzanowski, TH ;
Findlay, DL ;
Mills, KH ;
Paterson, MJ ;
Stainton, MP ;
Schindler, DW .
ECOSYSTEMS, 2000, 3 (03) :293-307
[5]   The pathway to noxious cyanobacteria blooms in lakes: the food web as the final turn [J].
Elser, JJ .
FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, 1999, 42 (03) :537-543
[6]   BIOMANIPULATION OF LAKE-221 IN THE EXPERIMENTAL LAKES AREA (ELA) - EFFECTS ON PHYTOPLANKTON AND NUTRIENTS [J].
FINDLAY, DL ;
KASIAN, SEM ;
HENDZEL, LL ;
REGEHR, GW ;
SCHINDLER, EU ;
SHEARER, JA .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1994, 51 (12) :2794-2807
[7]   NITROGEN-FIXATION IN CANADIAN PRECAMBRIAN SHIELD LAKES [J].
FLETT, RJ ;
SCHINDLER, DW ;
HAMILTON, RD ;
CAMPBELL, NER .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 1980, 37 (03) :494-505
[8]  
Fogg G.E., 1973, BLUE GREEN ALGAE
[9]  
GALLON JR, 1992, NEW PHYTOL, V122, P571
[10]   EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH TO PRODUCTION DYNAMICS AND STRUCTURE OF FRESHWATER ANIMAL COMMUNITIES [J].
HALL, DJ ;
COOPER, WE ;
WERNER, EE .
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 1970, 15 (06) :839-&