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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Field and laboratory evaluations of bioassays for nitrogen and phosphorus with algae and aquatic weeds1

George P. Fitzgerald
- 01 Mar 1969 - 
- Vol. 14, Iss: 2, pp 206-212
TLDR
The rate of absorption of ammonia in the dark and the amount of orthophosphate extracted by boiling water can be used to follow changes in the nutritional status of nitrogen and phosphorus in algae and aquatic weeds with relation to changes in supply of these elements.
Abstract
ABSTBACIY The rate of absorption of ammonia in the dark and the amount of orthophosphate extracted by boiling water can be used to follow changes in the nutritional status of nitrogen and phosphorus in algae and aquatic weeds with relation to changes in supply of these elements. Measurements of alkaline phosphatase activity carried out in phosphorusfree media can also be used to follow changes in the phosphorus nutrition of aquatic plants; growth under conditions of surplus available phosphorus reduces (by dilution) their alkaline phosphatase activity. Only terminal portions of aquatic weeds should be used for nutritional bioassays because of nutritional differences between young and old portions of the same plant. The importance of testing each species of plants separately is shown by contrasting results obtained with nitrogen-fixing (phosphorus-limited) and nonfixing ( nitrogen-limited ) bl ue-green algae from the same environment. These methods provide simple but useful bioassays for studies of eutrophication.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Inorganic nutrient uptake and deficiency in algae.

Healey Fp
TL;DR: An attempt is made to borrow information from the physiology of bacteria, fungi, and higher plants where they augment observations on algae in an attempt to find new insights into the metabolic roles of nutrients and the mechanisms of their assimilation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorus cycle of model ecosystems : significance for decomposer food chains and effect of bacterial grazers

R. J. Barsdate
- 01 Jan 1974 - 
TL;DR: The phosphorus cycle of microcosms consisting of decomposing plant material and bacteria (with or without bacterial grazers) was studied using a 32p tracer method and compared with computer simulations of a conceptual model of the system, found useful for the analysis of the functioning of ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eutrophication in peel inlet—I. The problem-defining behavior and a mathematical model for the phosphorus scenario

TL;DR: The problem of cultural eutrophication in Peel Inlet, Western Australia, where the system behavior of interest is the excessive growth of the alga Cladophora, is amenable to a phosphorus-based model and provides one feasible explanation of this nuisance algal problem.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics of phosphorus deficiency in anabaena1

F. P. Healey
- 01 Dec 1973 - 
TL;DR: Entering into phophorus deficiency was accompanied by a loss of heterocysts, a decline in chlorophyll a, protein, RNA, and cellular phosphorus, and an increase in carbohydrate per unit dry weight.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ammonium and phosphate uptake rates, N: P supply ratios, and evidence for N and P limitation in some oligotrophic lakes1

TL;DR: Saturated NH,+ and PO,’ uptake rates were determined for Synechococcus and Synedra, grown under different N: P supply ratios, and Nutrient bioassay studies on water from one of these lakes indicated that N was in short supply among mcmbcrs of the phytoplankton community.
References
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In situ studies on n2 fixation using the acetylene

TL;DR: Data obtained in experiments designed to test the feasibility of employing a simple method for measuring acetylene reduction as an index of N2 fixation in the field illustrate that the method is practical and extremely sensitive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toxicity of a unialgal culture of Microcystis aeruginosa.

TL;DR: A unialgal culture of Microcystis aeruginosa Kutz, which is toxic when injected intraperitoneally into white mice, has been isolated and produces a complex of symptoms similar to septicaemia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tissue analysis as a measure of nutrient availability for the growth of angiosperm aquatic plants1

TL;DR: Results indicated that in all but one of the lakes, phosphorus supply was more likely to limit higher aquatic plant growth than was nitrogen, and a system was developed for culturing algae-free plants in a synthetic nutrient medium.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transfer of Biologically Fixed Nitrogen in a Sand Dune Slack Region

TL;DR: In this article, it has been reported that natural populations of blue-green algae occurring in an area of sand dune slack at Blakeney Point, Norfolk, assimilate appreciable quantities of elemental nitrogen from the atmosphere during spring, summer and autumn, when there is often an abundant growth of gelatinous Myxophyceae.
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