Growth and nitrogen uptake kinetics in cultured Prorocentrum donghaiense

31Citations
Citations of this article
41Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

We compared growth kinetics of Prorocentrum donghaiense cultures on different nitrogen (N) compounds including nitrate (NO3-), ammonium (NH4+), urea, glutamic acid (glu), dialanine (diala) and cyanate. P. donghaiense exhibited standard Monod-type growth kinetics over a range of N concentraions (0.5-500 μmol N L-1 for NO3- and NH4+, 0.5-50 μmol N L-1 for urea, 0.5-100 μmol N L-1 for glu and cyanate, and 0.5-200 μmol N L-1 for diala) for all of the N compounds tested. Cultures grown on glu and urea had the highest maximum growth rates (μm, 1.51±0.06 d-1 and 1.50±0.05 d -1, respectively). However, cultures grown on cyanate, NO 3-, and NH4+ had lower half saturation constants (Kμ, 0.28-0.51 μmol N L-1). N uptake kinetics were measured in NO3--deplete and -replete batch cultures of P. donghaiense. In NO3--deplete batch cultures, P. donghaiense exhibited Michaelis-Menten type uptake kinetics for NO3-, NH4+, urea and algal amino acids; uptake was saturated at or below 50 μmol N L-1. In NO 3--replete batch cultures, NH4+, urea, and algal amino acid uptake kinetics were similar to those measured in NO3--deplete batch cultures. Together, our results demonstrate that P. donghaiense can grow well on a variety of N sources, and exhibits similar uptake kinetics under both nutrient replete and deplete conditions. This may be an important factor facilitating their growth during bloom initiation and development in N-enriched estuaries where many algae compete for bioavailable N and the nutrient environment changes as a result of algal growth. © 2014 Hu et al.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hu, Z., Duan, S., Xu, N., & Mulholland, M. R. (2014). Growth and nitrogen uptake kinetics in cultured Prorocentrum donghaiense. PLoS ONE, 9(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094030

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free