Abstract

We have measured the photosynthetic assimilation of 14C-carbon dioxide into (1) ethanol-soluble, (2) hot-trichloroacetic acid (TCA)-soluble (polysaccharide), and (3) protein fractions of natural populations of marine phytoplankton. Diurnal studies showed a continuing incorporation of carbon-14 into the protein fraction during hours of darkness. This was accompanied by a concomitant decrease in the proportion assimilated into polysaccharide. When incorporation was measured under constant experimental conditions, the pattern of photosynthesis did not vary from one time of day to another. At one station approximately 12 km south of Boothbay Harbor, the proportion of carbon entering protein showed marked seasonal changes. During the winter, approximately 10 to 20% of the fixed carbon was incorporated into protein. During the summer the value increased to 22 to 35%. Between these times, a transient high value of 37 to 47% of the fixed carbon entering protein coincided with the spring bloom. The increases in proportion incorporated into protein were largely paralleled by equivalent decreases in the polysaccharide fraction. The proportion of carbon incorporated into protein during photosynthesis also increased markedly at reduced light intensities. This increase occurred both when populations were incubated in neutral-density filters and when incubated at increasing depths in the photic zone. There was little consistent and significant difference between the neutral-density filters and depth in the water column, suggesting a minimal role for light quality. The extent of the increased relative rate of protein synthesis at the lower light intensities depended on the nutritional state of the phytoplankton. For example, summer populations from water containing low concentrations of inorganic nutrients responded less dramatically to reduced light intensities than did populations from nutrient-rich waters.

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