Element contentofOchromonas danica: A replicated chemostat study controlling the growth rate and temperature

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Abstract

Ecological stoichiometry focuses on the balance between multiple nutrient elements in resources and in consumers of those resources. The major consumers of bacteria in aquatic food webs are heterotrophic and mixotrophic nanoflagellates. Despite the importance of this consumer-resource interaction to understanding nutrient dynamics in the aquatic food web, few data are available addressing the element stoichiometry of flagellate consumers. Ochromonas danica, a mixotrophic bacterivore, was used as a model organism to study the relationships among temperature, growth rate and element stoichiometry. Ochromonas danica was grown in chemostats at dilution rates ranging between 0.03 and 0.10 h-1 and temperatures ranging between 15 and 28 °C. Cells accumulated elements as interactive functions of temperature and growth rate, with the highest element concentrations corresponding to cells grown at a low temperature and high growth rates. The highest concentrations of elements were associated with small cells. Temperature and growth rate affected the element stoichiometry (as C: N, C: P and N: P) of O. danica in a complex manner, but the growth rate had a greater effect on ratios than did temperature. © 2010 Federation of European Microbiological Societies.

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Simonds, S., Grover, J. P., & Chrzanowski, T. H. (2010). Element contentofOchromonas danica: A replicated chemostat study controlling the growth rate and temperature. FEMS Microbiology Ecology, 74(2), 346–352. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6941.2010.00963.x

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