Abstract

Bacterioplankton nutrient metabolism in the Eastern Tropical North Pacific (ETNP) was assessed using specific activities of intracellular nitrogen (N) assimilation enzymes and hydrolytic ectoenzymes during amendment experiments, mesocosms, and diel studies of in situ rates. Glutamine synthetase (GS) and assimilatory nitrate reductase (ANR) were used to investigate N bioavailability, alkaline phosphatase (AP) to assess phosphorous (P) bioavailability and β-glucosidase (β-Glu) to detect shifts in the use of labile dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Conditions regulating activity of each enzyme were tested using incubations of < 0.6 mm size-fractionated seawater amended with different combinations of N, P, and DOC as glucose. Overall, N-deficiency was indicated by pronounced growth stimulation and repression of GS and ANR activity in incubations amended with dissolved free amino acid and ammonium. Phosphate and glucose amendments produced little or no growth stimulation, but did influence activity of all enzymes measured. Enzyme activities of bacterioplankton in mesocosms of whole plankton indicated enhanced N-deficiency and glucoside hydrolysis when the plankton community was released from any P-deficiency. Spatially, enzyme activity of bacterioplankton during two diel studies (at one slope and one open-ocean station) suggested greater N-deficiency at surface depths than within the chlorophyll maximum where activity of AP and b-Glu was often greatest. There was also greater GS and ANR activity at the open-ocean station, which had lower concentrations of dissolved inorganic N (DIN) relative to soluble reactive P (SRP), than along the continental slope of Mexico. These data suggest that bacterioplankton in surface waters of the ETNP require a large flux of DOC to drive N-deficiency; whereas, bacterioplankton deeper in the chlorophyll maximum depend on hydrolysis of complex DOC and DOP to meet their carbon demand in the presence of elevated nutrients with a low DIN:SRP ratio.

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