Effects of nitrogen supply and continuous darkness on growth and photosynthesis of the arctic kelp Lmninaria soZidun&a

Sporophytes of the arctic kelp L.aminaria solidungula were collected from the Beaufort Sea and kept for 7 months at 05 1.YC in a factorial experiment under two light (continuous darkness or 25 pmol photons rn-: s-l on a 12: 12 L/D cycle) and two nutrient regimes (with or without added nitrate). We m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: William J. Henley, Kenneth H. Dunton
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.319.6915
http://new.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_42/issue_2/0209.pdf
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Summary:Sporophytes of the arctic kelp L.aminaria solidungula were collected from the Beaufort Sea and kept for 7 months at 05 1.YC in a factorial experiment under two light (continuous darkness or 25 pmol photons rn-: s-l on a 12: 12 L/D cycle) and two nutrient regimes (with or without added nitrate). We monitored growth rate and at the end of the experiment measured the following on both new and old blades: carbon and nitrogen content, chlorophyll and carotenoids, photosynthetic light-response (P vs. Z) curves, and photosynthetic unit size (Chl/P,,). New blade initiation was independent of light and external nitrate, but blades grew minimally in darkness. Both new (Bl) and old (B2) blades of plants held in darkness (with or without added nitrate) had the same quantum yield (4,) and area-normalized photosynthetic capacity (P,), but a slightly lower respiration rate (R,) and compensation irradiance (I, I 1.5 kmol photons m-2 s-l) as B2 of plants grown in the light with added nitrate. Nitrogen starvation in the light, but not in darkness, caused reduced pigments, P,, and 4, and increased I,. Tissue C and N were primarily affected by light, whereas pigments were more strongly affected by N and 1ightXN interaction. Based on these results, previous results for field-collected plants, and continuous in situ light data, we conclude that total annual growth in this population is severely light-limited, with N having an important but secondary role. Kelps (Phaeophyta, Laminariales) are usually the predominant