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Journal ArticleDOI

Excretion of some organic compounds by marine phytoplankton1

TLDR
The excretion of photoassimilated carbon was determined for 22 species of unicellular marine algae in culture during periods of log-phase growth and for some natural marine phytoplankton populations from Vineyard Sound and the Gulf of Maine.
Abstract
The excretion of photoassimilated carbon was determined for 22 species of unicellular marine algae in culture during periods of log-phase growth and for some natural marine phytoplankton populations from Vineyard Sound and the Gulf of Maine. Carbon 14 tracers gave some information about the composition of the excreted material. Most of the algae excreted 3-6s of their photoassimilated carbon during logarithmic growth. A few species excreted as much as 10-25s under the same conditions. Algae subjected to two different light intensities, 3,000 lux and 25,000 Iux, varied less than 30% in their relative rates of excretion. However, algae exposed to direct sunlight (lOO,OOO120,000 lux) had very high excretion rates, possibly resulting from damage to the cells by photooxidation. Glycolic acid formed 938% of the total carbon excretion in Olisthodiscus sp., Chaetoceros pelagicus, Chlorococcum sp. and Skeletonema costatum. Lower relative amounts were excreted by most of the species studied. Skeletonema costatum excreted considerably more glycolic acid at light intensities below 15,000 lux than above. This is contrary to the findings of other investigators using the freshwater alga Chlorella pyrenoidosa. The amount of carbon excreted as protein ranged from 0.2 to 5.9%, and that excreted as chloroform-soluble material ranged from 2.8 to 10.3% of the total. After electrodialysis, 12-340/O of the compounds were recovered in the anion fraction. Considerable quantities of amino acids and peptides were also detected as excretory products of many of the algae. A few species excreted a single substance almost exclusively. Thus, Chlorella sp. excreted mainly proline, Dunaliellu tertiolectu mainly glycerol, and Olisthodiscus sp. mainly mannitol. Apparently healthy populations of natural phytoplankton excreted 4-16s of their photoassimilated carbon. However, 17-38s was excreted by a sample taken at the end of a diatom bloom, when a large number of empty frustules was present.

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Book

Organic geochemistry of natural waters

E. M. Thurman
TL;DR: The first part of the book as mentioned in this paper is a general overview of the amount and general nature of dissolved organic carbon in natural waters, and the second part is a summary of the data that has accumulated from many disciplines over the last decade.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic Engineering of Algae for Enhanced Biofuel Production

TL;DR: Potential avenues of genetic engineering that may be undertaken in order to improve microalgae as a biofuel platform for the production of biohydrogen, starch-derived alcohols, diesel fuel surrogates, and/or alkanes are focused on.
Journal ArticleDOI

Master recyclers: features and functions of bacteria associated with phytoplankton blooms

TL;DR: On the basis of selected field and laboratory-based studies of flavobacteria and roseobacters, distinct metabolic strategies are emerging for these archetypal phytoplankton-associated taxa, which provide insights into the underlying mechanisms that dictate their behaviours during blooms.
Journal ArticleDOI

The production of dissolved organic matter by phytoplankton and its importance to bacteria : patterns across marine and freshwater systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed published rates of extracellular release (ER) of organic carbon to determine the primary constraints on this process and its importance to bacteria, from 16 studies extracted observations of ER, particulate primary production (PP), and phytoplankton biomass.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Studies of marine planktonic diatoms: i. cyclotella nana hustedt, and detonula confervacea (cleve) gran.

TL;DR: Bacteria-free clones of the small centric diatom Cyclotella nana Hustedt were isolated, three from estuarine localities, one from Continental Shelf waters, and one from the Sargasso Sea as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of sugars on paper chromatograms.

W E Trevelyan, +2 more
- 09 Sep 1950 - 
TL;DR: Modifications are introduced, based on a test given by Feigl for reducing sugars, which eliminate the heating step, and in which the reagents are applied in organic solvents, thus removing the danger of migration of the sugar spots.
Journal ArticleDOI

Further measurements of primary production using a large-volume plastic sphere

TL;DR: McAllister et al. as mentioned in this paper reported that the growth kinetics of a phytoplankton bloom were dominated by the constancy of the mean cell division rates which were relatively independent of temperature and light.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photosynthesis in the Ocean as a Function of Light Intensity1

TL;DR: It is shown that phytoplankton populations cannot photosynthesize sufficiently to compensate for their own respiration during periods of low solar radiation, as may occur in the winter months at temperate or northern latitudes.
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