Abstract

Response of adenine nucleotides (ATP, ADP, AMP) and adenylate energy charge (EC) to atrazine, a triazine herbicide, was evaluated as an indicator of metabolic state in Zostera marina L. (eelgrass), a submerged marine angiosperm. Short-term (6 h) atrazine stress reduced ATP and total adenylates (AT) at both 10 and 100 ppb, but EC remained constant. Net productivity decreased at 100, but not at 10 ppb atrazine over 6 h. Long-term (21 day) atrazine stress was evidenced by growth inhibition and 50% mortality near 100 ppb. EC was reduced at 0.1, 1.0 and 10 ppb atrazine, but ATP and EC increased with physiological response to severe stress (100 ppb) after 21 days. Apparently, ATP and AT decrease over the short-term but rebound over the long-term with severe atrazine stress, increasing beyond control levels before plant death results. Supplementing adenine nucleotide and EC results with more conventional quantitative analyses should afford greater knowledge of physiological response to environmental variation.

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