Regulation of nitrate and ammonium uptake in the Greenland Sea

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Abstract

The uptake of nitrate and ammonium was investigated experimentally during early spring 1989 in the Greenland Sea, with particular attention placed on the roles of irradiance, nitrogen concentrations and nitrateammonium interactions. The phytoplankton assemblage was dominated by the colonial prymnesiophyte Phaeocystis pouchetii. Nitrate concentrations ranged from undetectable at the end of the cruise to greater than 10 μM, and ammonium levels ranged from less than 0.1 to 1.9μM. The uptake of both nitrate and ammonium as a function of irradiance was found to be a saturation response. Photoinhibition occurred and was found to be greater for ammonium uptake. Ammonium uptake also saturated at irradiance levels five times lower than those needed to saturate nitrate uptake. Nitrate and ammonium uptake as a function of nitrogen concentration also was characterized by a saturation response, with the estimated half-saturation constant (Ks) value for nitrate uptake being 0.29 μM. Elevated ammonium concentrations inhibited nitrate uptake, and the response appeared to be one of exponential decrease with increasing concentrations of ammonium. The most important factor in the Greenland Sea influencing ammonium uptake during the spring was irradiace, while both irradiance and ammonium concentrations played major roles in regulating nitrate uptake and new production. © 1993 Springer-Verlag.

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Muggli, D. L., & Smith, W. O. (1993). Regulation of nitrate and ammonium uptake in the Greenland Sea. Marine Biology, 115(2), 199–208. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00346336

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