THE ACQUISITION OF INORGANIC CARBON BY MARINE MACROALGAE

被引:73
作者
JOHNSTON, AM
机构
来源
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE BOTANIQUE | 1991年 / 69卷 / 05期
关键词
INORGANIC CARBON CONCENTRATING MECHANISMS; MACROALGAE; CARBONIC ANHYDRASE;
D O I
10.1139/b91-144
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Marine macroalgae inhabit three different environments: the eulittoral zone, rock pools, and the sublittoral zone. Many macroalgae exhibit C4 gas exchange characteristics, i.e., low CO2 compensation point, high pH compensation point, photosynthesis insensitive to changes in oxygen changes below 21 kPa, and a high affinity for inorganic carbon. It is concluded that in general eulittoral and rock-pool species are more C4-like than the subtidal species though there are interesting exceptions. Experimental evidence points to the following mechanisms being involved in inorganic carbon acquisition by macroalgae. The role of beta-carboxylation as the primary step in carbon fixation is only convincing in Udotea flabellum, while PGA is the first product of C-14 fixation in most species. Direct evidence of inorganic carbon accumulation is only available for Ulva fasciata, whereas Chondrus crispus does not have this ability. Studies show that carbonic anhydrase is prominent in the mechanism of carbon acquisition by Ascophyllum nodosum, and when inhibited the alga is dependent on CO2, whereas U. fasciata retains some ability to use bicarbonate ions. It is concluded that macroalgae display a range of inorganic carbon assimilation mechanisms that are active to varying degrees. The relationships between these mechanisms, the different macroalgal habitats, and carbonic anhydrase is discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:1123 / 1132
页数:10
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]  
AKAZAWA T, 1976, Australian Journal of Plant Physiology, V3, P93
[2]   CARBON ACQUISITION STRATEGIES FOR MARINE MACROALGAE .1. UTILIZATION OF PROTON EXCHANGES VISUALIZED DURING PHOTOSYNTHESIS IN A CLOSED SYSTEM [J].
AXELSSON, L ;
UUSITALO, J .
MARINE BIOLOGY, 1988, 97 (02) :295-300
[3]  
BEER S, 1987, J PHYCOL, V23, P580
[4]   PHOTOSYNTHESIS OF ULVA SP .3. O-2 EFFECTS, CARBOXYLASE ACTIVITIES, AND THE CO2 INCORPORATION PATTERN [J].
BEER, S ;
ISRAEL, A .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1986, 81 (03) :937-938
[5]   PHOTOSYNTHESIS OF ULVA-FASCIATA .4. PH, CARBONIC-ANHYDRASE AND INORGANIC CARBON CONVERSIONS IN THE UNSTIRRED LAYER [J].
BEER, S ;
ISRAEL, A .
PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 1990, 13 (06) :555-560
[6]   PHOTOSYNTHESIS IN ULVA-FASCIATA .5. EVIDENCE FOR AN INORGANIC CARBON CONCENTRATING SYSTEM, AND RIBULOSE-1,5-BISPHOSPHATE CARBOXYLASE OXYGENASE CO2 KINETICS [J].
BEER, S ;
ISRAEL, A ;
DRECHSLER, Z ;
COHEN, Y .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1990, 94 (04) :1542-1546
[7]  
BEER S, 1983, J EXP MAR BIOL ECOL, V70, P99
[8]   CARBON NUTRITION OF SEAWEEDS - PHOTOSYNTHESIS, PHOTORESPIRATION AND RESPIRATION [J].
BIDWELL, RGS ;
MCLACHLAN, J .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 1985, 86 (01) :15-46
[9]   INHIBITION OF RESPIRATION DURING PHOTOSYNTHESIS BY SOME ALGAE [J].
BROWN, DL ;
TREGUNNA, EB .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 1967, 45 (07) :1135-&