dc.identifier.citation |
PIEDRAS, Fernanda Reinhardt; Odebrecht, Clarisse. The response of surf-zone phytoplankton to nutrient enrichment (Cassino Beach, Brazil). Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, v. 432–433, p. 156–161, 2012. Disponível em: <http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022098112002833>. Acesso em: 04 nov. 2015. |
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dc.description.abstract |
To understand the mechanisms that trigger changes in chlorophyll a and species composition in the phytoplankton
of the surf-zone at Cassino Beach (RS), we performed two short nutrient-enrichment experiments
(4–5 days each) during the summer and winter of 2010. Seawater was incubated under controlled conditions
of temperature (summer 25± 3 °C, winter 18±1 °C), salinity (summer 28, winter 26) and irradiance
(100 μmol m−2 s−1
). Dissolved inorganic nutrients were added in various concentrations in the summer
(silicate, Si; nitrate, N; phosphate, P) and winter (N, P) experiments. Samples were taken daily for cell counts
and chlorophyll a analysis. In both experiments, chlorophyll a values and cell density showed a significant increase
(mainly diatoms) in the treatments with nitrate addition, regardless of the proportion added. In the
summer experiment, the largest chlorophyll a increase, approximately threefold (31.5 to 89.5 μg L−1
), was
observed in the NP treatment due to the growth of Asterionellopsis glacialis (Castracane) Round, Skeletonema
tropicum Cleve, Thalassiosira sp. Cleve and Pseudo-nitzschia spp. Peragallo. The maximum growth was obtained
in the SiNP treatment for S. tropicum (μ=0.7), Thalassiosira (μ= 1.9) and Pseudo-nitzschia (μ= 1.3) and in the
SiN treatment for A. glacialis (μ= 1.0). In the winter experiment, the chlorophyll a content increased 4.2 and
5.5 times, respectively, in the N and NP treatments (maxima 38.8 μg L−1 and 31.5 μg L−1
), where A. glacialis
(μ= 1.7–1.9) and Cylindrotheca closterium (Ehrenberg) Reimann & J.C. Lewin (μ= 1.0–1.96) showed the
highest amount of growth. These results indicate that nitrate is the most important nutrient controlling phytoplankton
chlorophyll a at sandy Cassino Beach. However, the responses of different species to enrichment
during the summer and winter indicated that other factors also played a role. A. glacialis, present during
both seasons, presented the highest growth rate during the winter, whereas during the summer it was independent
of nutrient enrichment but coincided with the lowest growth of S. tropicum. This finding suggested
the occurrence of allelopathic interactions between these species. During the summer, multi-enrichment
(SiNP) favoured the best growth of S. tropicum, Pseudo-nitzschia spp. and Thalassiosira sp. These results indicated
that the phytoplankton composition and diversity in the surf zone of Cassino Beach are shaped by the
availability of silicate and phosphorus as well as by the availability of nitrate. |
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