COMPARISON OF GROWTH AND SINKING RATES OF NON‐COCCOLITH‐ AND COCCOLITH‐FORMING STRAINS OF EMILIANIA HUXLEYI(PRYMNESIOPHYCEAE) GROWN UNDER DIFFERENT IRRADIANCES AND NITROGEN SOURCES1
- 1 February 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Phycology
- Vol. 32 (1) , 17-21
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0022-3646.1996.00017.x
Abstract
We examined the effect of the presence or absence of coccoliths on the growth and sinking rates of an oceanic isolate of the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) Hay et Mohler isolated from the northeastern subarctic Pacific. Coccolith‐forming and non‐coccolith‐forming (i.e. naked, nonmotile) strains were obtained from the same isolate and grown under both saturating and limiting irradiance levels with either nitrate or ammonium as the primary nitrogen source. Sinking rate, growth rate, and cell volume (excluding coccoliths) were measured for each culture. Under saturating irradiance, coccolith‐forming cells grew significantly slower than naked cells, had significantly higher sinking rates, and had larger cell volumes than naked cells. Under limiting irradiance levels, growth rates of the two strains were identical, sinking rates were higher for coccolith‐forming cells in stationary‐phase cultures only, and cell volumes remained greater for coccolith‐forming cells.The sinking rates achieved for this ubiquitous coccolithophore ranged from −1. Sinking rates were not statistically different between coccolith‐forming and naked strains of E. huxleyi under limiting irradiance conditions for log‐phase cultures, but sinking rates were greater for coccolith‐forming cells under some of the other conditions tested. However, the average sinking rate was never more than twice as great as for coccolith‐forming cells, with the exception of nitrate‐grown, senescent cells under limiting irradiance (3.4 times greater). Cell volumes (excluding coccoliths) were consistently ca. 1.5 times greater for coccolith‐forming cells than for naked cells.Nitrogen source had an effect on growth rate and cell volume, with ammonium‐grown cultures growing faster and having larger cell volumes than nitrate‐grown cultures of both strains. However, despite the difference in growth rate and cell volume, nitrogen source had little if any effect on sinking rate.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Immunochemical characterization for eukaryotic ultraplankton from the Atlantic and Pacific oceansJournal of Plankton Research, 1994
- Does energy control the sinking rates of marine diatoms?Limnology and Oceanography, 1992
- Genotypic variation in the coccolithophorid speciesEmiliania huxleyiMarine Micropaleontology, 1991
- DISTRIBUTION OF TWO TYPES OF EMILIANIA HUXLEYI (PRYMNESIOPHYCEAE) IN THE NORTHEAST ATLANTIC REGION AS DETERMINED BY IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE AND COCCOLITH MORPHOLOGY1Journal of Phycology, 1991
- ROLE OF THE LIGHT-DARK CYCLE AND MEDIUM COMPOSITION ON THE PRODUCTION OF COCCOLITHS BY EMILIANIA HUXLEYI (HAPTOPHYCEAE)1Journal of Phycology, 1991
- Suspension Properties of Various Phyletic Groups of Phytoplankton and Tintinnids in an Oligotrophic, Subtropical SystemMarine Ecology, 1983
- Genetic variability and spatial patterns of genetic differentiation in the reproductive rates of the marine coccolithophores Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica1,2Limnology and Oceanography, 1982
- SETCOL — A Technologically Simple and Reliable Method for Measuring Phytoplankton Sinking RatesCanadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 1981
- A BROAD SPECTRUM ARTIFICIAL SEA WATER MEDIUM FOR COASTAL AND OPEN OCEAN PHYTOPLANKTON1Journal of Phycology, 1980
- The Inverse Relationship Between Nutrient Nitrogen Concentration and Coccolith Calcification in Cultures of the Coccolithophorid Hymenomonas sp.*The Journal of Protozoology, 1978