Abstract
Here, variable to maximal chlorophyll fluorescence ratio (Fv:Fm) was used to determine light history of Microcystis aeruginosa colonies in a shallow, stratified lake. As insolation increased, the lake stratified and M. aeruginosa colonies displayed a depression in Fv:Fm that became less severe with depth. In the afternoon, wind speed increased, entraining colonies and disrupting the discrete depth variable Fv:Fm response. The point where the photochemical response became homogenized allowed determination of the water friction velocity necessary to entrain colonies of M. aeruginosa (u* = 0.003 m s-1). Rates of Fv:Fm depression were dependent upon the photon flux density, whereas the rate of recovery of Fv:Fm was dependent upon the historical photon density. A model is presented which models Fv:Fm response to five mixing scenarios: a stratified water body with no motion and no vertical migration; a cell circulating within the surface mixed layer of the Torrens Lake; a nocturnally mixed water column, which stratifies at dawn, allowing vertical migration of positively buoyant M. aeruginosa colonies; organized motion with a Langmuir circulation; and a simulation of turbulent water motion. © New Phytologist (2003).
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Brookes, J. D., Regel, R. H., & Ganf, G. G. (2003). Changes in the photo-chemistry of Microcystis aeruginosa in response to light and mixing. New Phytologist, 158(1), 151–164. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1469-8137.2003.00718.x
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