Abstract
Two experimental series were run to evaluate the potential of algal development on dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) compounds as the sole source of nitrogen (N) nutrition. Monocultures of several common Lake Kinneret algae (Pediastrum duplex, Synechococcus sp.,Microcystis aeruginosa, Aphanizomenon ovalisporum andCyclotella sp.) were incubated for 3 weeks in the laboratory with different inorganic (NH4+, NO3-) or organic (hypoxanthine, urea, guanine, ornithine, glucosamine, lysine) nitrogen sources. Even though the cultures were not axenic, marked differences were observed in algal growth response.Pediastrum, Cyclotella andAphanizomenon grew well on most N sources, and cyanobacterial growth and yield were consistently greatest when the urea was the only N source. We also followed algal growth and eventual species dominance in batch samples of GF/F-filtered lake water, supplemented with orthophosphate and different inorganic or organic N compounds and inoculated with concentrated lake phytoplankton. Although no clear impact on phytoplankton growth (as chlorophyll concentration) was observed, in seven out of 11 experiments we could discern changes in the algal species that became dominant in flasks with different organic and inorganic N sources. Our results are consistent with the proposition that components of the DON pool are not only an important potential, direct or indirect N source for phytoplankton, but also that different algal species can exploit these sources with varying capabilities so that different N substrates may selectively stimulate the development of dominant algal species.

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