4.6 Article

Effects of irradiance on diel and seasonal patterns of nutrient uptake by stream periphyton

Journal

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 8, Pages 1617-1630

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2012.02822.x

Keywords

autotrophy; carbon; heterotrophy; nitrogen; phosphorus

Funding

  1. New Zealand Foundation for Research, Science and Technology [C01X0307, C01X1005]

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1. Irradiance strongly affects the abundance of stream periphyton communities that in turn influence patterns of instream nutrient uptake. We examined relationships between irradiance and periphyton nutrient uptake taking into account diel and seasonal variation in ambient irradiance. 2. Uptake of dissolved N, P and C by periphyton as areal uptake (U) and demand (Vf) was determined under 11 irradiance levels (0100% of ambient conditions) using shallow stream-side experimental channels. Experiments were conducted once per season over one annual cycle with both day and night uptake rates assessed, together with periphyton biomass and autotrophic production rates. 3. No consistent diel variation in areal uptake or demand was detected for the predominant inorganic or total dissolved nutrients even at the highest irradiances. Lack of variation may indicate nutrient limitation, with photosynthetic sequestration and storage of C during the day for subsequent utilisation at night. Alternatively, oxygen consumption by photoautotrophs at night may stimulate compensatory heterotrophic uptake (e.g. denitrification). 4. In all seasons, release of dissolved organic N was detected during the day but to a lesser extent at night. This was not directly related to irradiance levels, indicating that heterotrophic metabolism (e.g. microbial decomposition) contributes to this phenomenon. 5. Areal uptake and demand for the predominant inorganic and total dissolved nutrients increased in response to increasing irradiance in some or all seasons, but rates were typically higher during the spring and summer. Saturation of areal uptake and demand at elevated irradiances was evident during the spring. demand was also saturated at higher irradiances in the summer and autumn. Maximum demand was comparable during spring and summer, but saturation occurred at lower irradiance in summer (24 h average 135145 mu mol m-2 s-1) relative to spring (312424 mu mol m-2 s-1), indicating more efficient nutrient uptake in summer. Higher total periphyton biomass in summer, but comparable autotrophic biomass (chlorophyll a), implies that heterotrophic metabolism may contribute to this greater efficiency. In spring, autotrophic biomass peaked at an irradiance level of 225 mu mol m-2 s-1, also suggesting a role for heterotrophic metabolism in demand at higher irradiances. 6. The results of this study show that irradiance levels exert a strong influence on the nature and quantity of instream nutrient uptake with N demand saturated at elevated irradiance levels during the spring, summer and autumn. Our results also suggest that heterotrophic metabolism makes a measurable contribution to instream nutrient uptake even under higher irradiances that favour autotrophic activity.

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