Abstract
Oxygen consumption and dissolved nitrogen fluxes at the water-sediment interface of an oyster-bed were measured in situ using transparent enclosures inserted on undisturbed sediment. Experiments were performed in summer, under dark and light conditions, with various densities of the oyster Crassostrea gigas (0–150 animals m − 2). The influence of oyster biomass on oxygen and ammonia exchange rates was similar in both lighting conditions. Oxygen consumption increased with increasing biomass, though not at the level of prediction for the highest biomasses, suggesting a depressed respiration rate. Ammonia release never matched the rates predicted by adding sediment efflux to oyster excretion, when biomass exceeded 100 g DW m − 2. The coupling between oxygen consumption and ammonia release (O : N ratio) was thus influenced by oyster biomass. Stabilization of nitrogen release was related to enhanced nitrification in the presence of oyster and/or sediment uptake of ammonia against the molecular gradient. Urea release was erratic but appeared uninfluenced by oyster biomass. Fluxes of oxygen and of each nitrogen compound displayed thus a specific response to modifications of the oyster biomass. Both the organisms and the sediment are involved in regulation processes of metabolic exchange rates at the water-sediment interface.
Published Version
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