Abstract
Macroalgal epiphytes within seagrass meadows make a significant contribution to total
primary production by assimilating water column N and transferring organic N to sediments. Assimilation
of NO3
– requires nitrate reductase (NR, EC 1.6.6.1); NR activity represents the capacity for
NO3
– assimilation. An optimised in vitro assay for determining NR activity in algal extracts was
applied to a wide range of macroalgae and detected NR activity in all 22 species tested with activity
2 to 290 nmolNO3
– min–1 g–1 frozen thallus. With liquid-N2 freezing immediately after sample collection,
this method was practical for estimating NR activity in field samples. Vertical distribution of NR
activity in macroalgal epiphytes was compared in contrasting Posidonia sinuosa and Amphibolis
antarctica seagrass meadows. Epiphytes on P. sinuosa had higher mass-specific NR activity than
those on A. antarctica. In P. sinuosa canopies, NR activity increased with distance from the sediment
surface and was negatively correlated with [NH4
+] in the water but uncorrelated with [NO3
–]. This
supported the hypothesis that NH4
+ released from the sediment suppresses NR in epiphytic algae. In
contrast, the vertical variation in NR activity in macroalgae on A. antarctica was not statistically significant
although there was a weak correlation with [NO3
–], which increased with distance from the
sediment. Estimated capacities for NO3
– assimilation in macroalgae epiphytic on seagrasses during
summer (24 and 46 mmolN m–2 d–1 for P. sinuosa and A. antarctica, respectively) were more than
twice the estimated N assimilation rates in similar seagrasses. When the estimates were based on
annual average epiphyte loads for seagrass meadows in other locations, they were comparable to
those of seagrasses. We conclude that epiphytic algae represent a potentially important sink for
water-column nitrate within seagrass meadows.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 103-114 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Marine Ecology: Progress Series |
Volume | 288 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 10 Mar 2005 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Aquatic Science
- Ecology