Abstract

Dark respiration rates were measured and carbon-excretion rates calculated for a nitrate-limited population of the marine chrysophyte Monochrysis lutheri grown in continuous culture at 20°C on a 12 h light-12 h dark cycle of illumination and over a series of 4 growth rates. A significant (P<0.05) positive correlation was found between dark respiration rate and growth rate. From a simple linear fit to the data, the respiration rate at maximum growth rate was estimated to be roughly 10.5% of the maximum gross-carbon-production rate, and more than three times higher than the extrapolated respiration rate at zero net-growth rate. Carbon-excretion rates showed no significant correlation with growth rate, and averaged less than 5% of the maximum gross-carbon-production rate. Mean cell nitrogen to carbon ratios were correlated in a virtually linear manner (r=0.994) with growth rate, and at a given growth rate were consistently higher than nitrogen to carbon ratios for the same species grown on continuous light. A comparison of carbon and nitrogen quotas as a function of growth rate for M. lutheri and other species suggests that the increase of cellular nitrogen at high growth rates under nitrate-limited growth conditions may be associated with the storage of cellular protein or amino acids rather than the presence of an inorganic nitrogen reservoir. The maximum nitrate uptake rate per cell during the day changed very little over the range of growth rates studied, and was comparable to the maximum uptake rate found for cells grown on continuous light. However, the cell nitrogen quota increased steadily with growth rate, causing a reduction in the maximum specific-uptake rate of nitrate during the day at high growth rates. The dark nitrate-uptake capacity of the population was clearly exceeded by the supply rate at the two higher growth rates, leading to a buildup of nitrate during the night which amounted to as much as 21% of the particulate nitrogen in the growth chamber by morning.

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