The Possible Importance of Silicon in Marine Eutrophication

  • Officer C
  • Ryther J
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Abstract

Diatom phytoplankton populations are the usual food for zooplankton and filter feeding fishes and contribute in a direct way to the large fishable populations in coastal zones. Flagellates, on the other hand, are frequently poor foods for most grazers and can lead to undesirable eutrophication effects. Arguments are presented that silicon is often the controlling nutrient in altering a diatom to a flagellate community. The alteration is governed by the relative magnitudes of the natural fluxes of the nutrients nitrogen, phosphorus and silicon to the receiving water body and the recycled fluxes of nitrogen and phosphorus from zooplankton grazing and phytoplankton respiration and decomposition. Examples of such alterations are presented for oceanic, estuarine and inland water bodies.

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Officer, C., & Ryther, J. (1980). The Possible Importance of Silicon in Marine Eutrophication. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 3, 83–91. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps003083

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