Abstract

The hypothesis that increasing nutrient supply increases the biomass of autotrophs pro- portionately more than the biomass of heterotrophs was tested by increasing (0, 1-, 2-, 4-, 8-, and 16- fold over the background loading of 5 mmol N m -2 d -1 , 1.6 mmol Si m -2 d -1 , and 0.25 mmol P m -2 d -1 ) the addition of nutrients to large (33 000 l) mesocosm units enclosing an oligotrophic coastal Mediter- ranean planktonic community. Autotrophic plankton biomass increased 50-fold along the range of nutrient inputs, whereas heterotrophic biomass increased only 10-fold. Heterotrophic biomass in- creased as the 1 ⁄5 power of the increase in the biomass of autotrophs, implying that the ratio of hetero- troph to autotroph biomass (HB/AB ratio) declined rapidly as the biomass of autotrophs increases with increasing nutrient inputs. The biomass distribution within the community shifted from an 'inverted pyramid' distribution, involving greater biomass of heterotrophs than that of autotrophs, at low nutrient inputs, to the conventional 'upward' pyramid pattern, where the biomass of autotrophs exceeds that of consumers, at the highest nutrient inputs. This shift stabilized after 4 d, and the pyra- mids remained quite constant for the rest of the experiment. The experimental test presented sup- ports the hypothesis that the relative biomass distribution between heterotrophs and autotrophs is regulated by nutrient supply.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call