Abstract

Partitioning of the nitrogen stock in a Fijian seagrass bed dominated by Syringodium isoetifolium (Ascherson) Dandy and in an adjacent area bare of macrophytic vegetation was assessed to evaluate the effect of the presence of seagrass on coral sediment. Concentrations of major nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphate, were as low in the water column at the seagrass bed and the bare area as they were in the open ocean. Concentrations of ammonium and dissolved organic nitrogen, however, were higher in the water within the seagrass canopy than they were in other waters. In sediments at the seagrass bed and the bare area, interstitial nitrogen, such as nitrate and dissolved organic nitrogen, was a minor component of the total nitrogen (0.3-0.05%). On the other hand, concentrations of total organic nitrogen in seagrass-bed sediment (about 70% of which was in the form of amorphous organic nitrogen and the rest of which came from living and dead seagrass) were more than three times higher than those in bare-area sediment. Concentrations of organic carbon from amorphous organic materials in seagrass-bed sediment showed no large change with depth, resulting in an apparent decrease in the carbodnitrogen atom ratio from 60 to 10. These results suggest some mechanisms to minimize the loss of nitrogen stock from the sediment of tropical seagrass beds.

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