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Estación de Fotobiología Playa Unión

About: Estación de Fotobiología Playa Unión is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Phytoplankton & Photoinhibition. The organization has 39 authors who have published 106 publications receiving 3371 citations. The organization is also known as: Estacion de Fotobiologia Playa Union.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This assessment addresses how the knowledge of the interactive effects of UV radiation and climate change factors on aquatic ecosystems has advanced in the past four years.
Abstract: Interactions between climate change and UV radiation are having strong effects on aquatic ecosystems due to feedback between temperature, UV radiation, and greenhouse gas concentration. Higher air temperatures and incoming solar radiation are increasing the surface water temperatures of lakes and oceans, with many large lakes warming at twice the rate of regional air temperatures. Warmer oceans are changing habitats and the species composition of many marine ecosystems. For some, such as corals, the temperatures may become too high. Temperature differences between surface and deep waters are becoming greater. This increase in thermal stratification makes the surface layers shallower and leads to stronger barriers to upward mixing of nutrients necessary for photosynthesis. This also results in exposure to higher levels of UV radiation of surface-dwelling organisms. In polar and alpine regions decreases in the duration and amount of snow and ice cover on lakes and oceans are also increasing exposure to UV radiation. In contrast, in lakes and coastal oceans the concentration and colour of UV-absorbing dissolved organic matter (DOM) from terrestrial ecosystems is increasing with greater runoff from higher precipitation and more frequent extreme storms. DOM thus creates a refuge from UV radiation that can enable UV-sensitive species to become established. At the same time, decreased UV radiation in such surface waters reduces the capacity of solar UV radiation to inactivate viruses and other pathogens and parasites, and increases the difficulty and price of purifying drinking water for municipal supplies. Solar UV radiation breaks down the DOM, making it more available for microbial processing, resulting in the release of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. In addition to screening solar irradiance, DOM, when sunlit in surface water, can lead to the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Increases in carbon dioxide are in turn acidifying the oceans and inhibiting the ability of many marine organisms to form UV-absorbing exoskeletons. Many aquatic organisms use adaptive strategies to mitigate the effects of solar UV-B radiation (280–315 nm), including vertical migration, crust formation, synthesis of UV-absorbing substances, and enzymatic and non-enzymatic quenching of ROS. Whether or not genetic adaptation to changes in the abiotic factors plays a role in mitigating stress and damage has not been determined. This assessment addresses how our knowledge of the interactive effects of UV radiation and climate change factors on aquatic ecosystems has advanced in the past four years.

279 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Five sources of anthropogenic pollution that affect marine and freshwater ecosystems are discussed: sewage, nutrients and terrigenous materials, crude oil, heavy metals and plastics, and the direct and indirect effects that these pollutants have on a range of aquatic organisms even when the pollutant source is distant from the sink.

267 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Photoinhibition (as a decrease of optimal quantum yield) was significantly greater under nitrogen‐deprived conditions than that under replete ammonium levels, and positive relationships between maximal GP or ETR and pigment ratios (BP and MAAs/chl a) and negative relationships with chl a concentration were found.
Abstract: The combined effects of ammonium concentration and UV radiation on the red alga Porphyra columbina (Montagne) from the Patagonian coast (Chubut, Argentina) was determined using short-term (less than a week) experimentation. Discs of P. columbina were incubated with three ammonium concentrations (0, 50, and 300μM NH 4 Cl) in an illuminated chamber (PAR = 300μmol photons. m - 2 .s - 1 , UVA = 15W.m - 2 , UVB = 0.7 W.m - 2 ) at 15°C. Algae incubated at 300μM ammonium showed a significant increase (P<0.05) in the concentration of mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) compared with the initial value or with the other ammonium treatments. The increase of MAAs was, however, a function of the quality of irradiance received, with a higher increase in samples exposed to UVA compared with UVB (29% and 5% increase, respectively). However, UVB radiation was more effective in inducing MAA synthesis per unit energy received by the algae. Samples exposed to PAR only had an intermediate increase in MAA concentration of 16%. Chl a concentration decreased through the incubation with the greatest decrease at high ammonium concentration. Phycobiliprotein (BP) decreased through time with the smallest decrease occurring at high ammonium concentration. Photo-inhibition (as a decrease of optimal quantum yield) was significantly greater under nitrogen-deprived conditions than that under replete ammonium levels. Maximal gross photosynthesis (GP m a x ), as oxygen evolution, and maximal electron transport rate (ETR m a x ), as chl fluorescence, increased with the ammonium concentration. Positive relationships between maximal GP or ETR and pigment ratios (BP/chl a and MAAs/chl a) and negative relationships with chl a concentration were found.

181 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Three filamentous and heterocystous N(2)-fixing cyanobacteria, Anabaena sp.
Abstract: Three filamentous and heterocystous N(2)-fixing cyanobacteria, Anabaena sp., Nostoc commune and Scytonema sp. were tested for the presence of ultraviolet-absorbing mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) and their induction by solar ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation. High performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) studies revealed the presence of only one type of MAAs in all three cyanobacteria, that was identified as shinorine, a bisubstituted MAA containing both glycine and serine groups having an absorption maximum at 334 nm and a retention time of around 2.8 min. There was a circadian induction in the synthesis of MAAs when the cultures were exposed to mid-latitude solar radiation (Playa Union, Rawson, Chubut, Patagonia, Argentina) for 3 days, 4-6th February, 2000. Solar radiation was measured by an ELDONET (European Light Dosimeter Network) filter radiometer permanently installed on the roof of the Estacion de Fotobiologia Playa Union (43 degrees 18' S; 65 degrees 03' W). The maximum irradiances were around 450-500, 45-50 and 1.0-1.2 Wm(-2) for PAR (photosynthetic active radiation), UV-A (ultraviolet-A) and UV-B (ultraviolet-B), respectively. PAR and UV-A had no significant impact on MAA induction while UV-B induced the synthesis of shinorine in all three cyanobacteria. Shinorine was found to be induced mostly during the light period. During the dark period the concentration stayed almost constant. In addition to shinorine, another unidentified, water-soluble, brownish compound with an absorption maximum at 315 nm was found to be induced by UV-B only in Scytonema sp. and released into the medium. This substance was neither found in Anabaena sp. nor in Nostoc commune. Judging from the results, the studied cyanobacteria may protect themselves from deleterious short wavelength radiation by their ability to synthesize photoprotective compounds in response to UV-B radiation.

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings suggest that the increase in UV-B irradiance due to ozone depletion not only might affect photosynthesis but also might alter the morphological development of filamentous cyanobacteria during acclimation or over adaptive time scales, and self-shading seems to play an important role in protecting this species against deleterious UVR.
Abstract: To study the impact of solar UV radiation (UVR) (280 to 400 nm) on the filamentous cyanobacterium Arthrospira (Spirulina) platensis, we examined the morphological changes and photosynthetic performance using an indoor-grown strain (which had not been exposed to sunlight for decades) and an outdoor-grown strain (which had been grown under sunlight for decades) while they were cultured with three solar radiation treatments: PAB (photosynthetically active radiation [PAR] plus UVR; 280 to 700 nm), PA (PAR plus UV-A; 320 to 700 nm), and P (PAR only; 400 to 700 nm). Solar UVR broke the spiral filaments of A. platensis exposed to full solar radiation in short-term low-cell-density cultures. This breakage was observed after 2 h for the indoor strain but after 4 to 6 h for the outdoor strain. Filament breakage also occurred in the cultures exposed to PAR alone; however, the extent of breakage was less than that observed for filaments exposed to full solar radiation. The spiral filaments broke and compressed when high-cell-density cultures were exposed to full solar radiation during long-term experiments. When UV-B was screened off, the filaments initially broke, but they elongated and became loosely arranged later (i.e., there were fewer spirals per unit of filament length). When UVR was filtered out, the spiral structure hardly broke or became looser. Photosynthetic 0, evolution in the presence of UVR was significantly suppressed in the indoor strain compared to the outdoor strain. UVR-induced inhibition increased with exposure time, and it was significantly lower in the outdoor strain. The concentration of UV-absorbing compounds was low in both strains, and there was no significant change in the amount regardless of the radiation treatment, suggesting that these compounds were not effectively used as protection against solar UVR. Self-shading, on the other hand, produced by compression of the spirals over adaptive time scales, seems to play an important role in protecting this species against deleterious UVR. Our findings suggest that the increase in UV-B irradiance due to ozone depletion not only might affect photosynthesis but also might alter the morphological development of filamentous cyanobacteria during acclimation or over adaptive time scales.

147 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20213
20203
20191
20185
20173
20163