Abstract
All three species of the marine blue-green alga Trichodesmium collected in the Sargasso and Caribbean seas were found to possess gas vacuoles. The constituent gas vesicles were much stronger than those found in any freshwater blue-green alga, the mean critical collapse pressures being 12 bars in T. erythraeum, 34 bars in T. contortum and 37 bars in T. thiebautii. This great strength is obviously an adaptation to the hydrostatic pressures at the depths to which these organisms occur in the ocean. In each case the gas vesicles are far too strong to be collapsed by rising cell turgor pressure, though gas-vacuolation could be slowly regulated by the differential growth of gas vesicles and cells. Since the vesicles are of a similar shape and size to those in other species, the vesicle wall material must be stronger. The majority of Trichodesmium colonies collected were positively buoyant, and in all cases tested the buoyancy was dependent on the presence of gas vacuoles. The buoyancy is important in increasing the residence time of these slowly growing algae in the euphotic zone and it is responsible for the surface water-blooms which they form.