Insights into algal nutrient uptake and carbon dynamics
Abstract
Marine phytoplankton are a pivotal component of the global carbon cycle and are
routinely modelled in Earth System Models as it is believed that their physiology is
well understood. The key studies for nutrient uptake occurred in the period 1967 to
1985, and the subject has received little attention since. Re-examining nutrient uptake
at sub-hourly scales using Lab-On-Chip (LoC) sensors was the original plan for this
study, but technical issues made this impossible, and so experimental cultures were
grown with daily samples taken. A compilation of all published data on algal nutrient
uptake was undertaken and examined in the context of variability in cell size,
taxonomy, nutrient resource and whether active or passive nutrient uptake prevails.
Despite published linear relationships between cell size and nutrient uptake, this could
not be found in the data compilation leading to an impression that algal nutrient uptake
is not an active process supported by transmembrane transporters. The new database
also revealed significant commonality in nutrient uptake kinetics between different
taxa and for different nutrient sources, so that competition between microalgae is not
governed by nutrients and other processes must be important for species and
taxonomic succession.
Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) is an important component of the marine carbon
cycle, with Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM) including a mixture of DIC, Dissolved
Organic Nitrogen (DON) and Dissolved Organic Phosphorus. Experiments to couple
nutrient uptake and measurements of DOC and DON release were undertaken in
parallel. Rapid (<1 day) and short-term (2-4 days) changes in the DOM composition
were detected in the cultures, when growth rates were low and increases in cell density
were not established. The mechanisms behind these short-term changes, whether
induced by exposure to light or microbial activity in the cultures, is unclear but
warrants future focus. A notable difficulty in the work was that the aged seawater used
as a media base contained a significant DOC and DOM signal that overrode the
potential magnitude of release by phytoplankton.