Abstract
Over the last two decades, escalating rates of coastal development have altered macro- and micronutrient loading patterns to many southeastern U.S. estuaries. This study addresses a potential consequence of urbanization-associated coastal deforestation that may have important implications for estuarine ecosystem productivity: a reduction in bioavailable Fe. We compared the potential for Fe limitation at representative sites in two neighboring South Carolina salt marsh estuaries, one (“Parsonage Creek” site in Murrells Inlet estuary) impacted by urbanization-associated clear-cutting, and the other (“Oyster Landing” site in North Inlet estuary) undeveloped and surrounded by forests. The urbanized estuarine site was marked by lower dissolved Fe concentrations compared to the forested estuarine site. In bioassay experiments conducted from 1996 to 1999, the addition of chelated Fe to natural phytoplankton populations stimulated chlorophyll a concentrations in water from Parsonage Creek on 6 of 11 sampling dates. Chlorophyll responses in Oyster Landing water also were observed on two of those sampling times, dates that followed periods of relatively low rainfall. In one experiment, the addition of Fe+NO 3 − to Parsonage Creek water led to significantly higher chlorophyll concentrations than when NO 3 − was added alone, but Fe+NH 4 + addition did not result in higher chlorophyll than NH 4 + addition alone. It was hypothesized that the difference in NO 3 − and NH 4 + responses was related to a greater tendency towards Si depletion in Fe-stressed NO 3 −-grown samples, or alternatively, to the higher Fe requirement for NO 3 − assimilation relative to that needed for NH 4 + assimilation. In bioassay experiments using Fe-deplete semi-continuous cultures of Synechococcus WH8101, Fe addition did not affect the net growth rate of cultures transferred to water from either estuary, but increased the chlorophyll a content of cells transferred to Parsonage Creek water. Finally, photosynthesis vs. irradiance parameters ( α, P max) obtained from Oyster Landing samples (<2 μm size fraction) were similar to those measured in Fe-replete Synechococcus continuous cultures, while the same parameters derived from Parsonage Creek samples were much lower and comparable to those from Fe-deplete cultures. The results indicate that phytoplankton population growth from high salinity salt marsh estuaries can be Fe-limited. Also, the potential for Fe limitation was more prevalent in a urbanized deforested estuary than in an undeveloped forested estuary, consistent with the hypothesis that organically bound Fe from coastal forests plays an important role in supplying Fe for the growth of estuarine phytoplankton.
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More From: Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
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