Abstract

Experiments were conducted in the equatorial Pacific Ocean to assess the role of Fe and grazing in regulating use of N03- by the phytoplankton community. Nitrate uptake rates in situ were slow because NH,+ concentrations were inhibitory and because phytoplankton biomass was kept low by grazing. When feeding of grazers was artificially suppressed, phytoplankton net growth rate increased, biomass accumulated, and NO, - was consumed. Rapid rates of Fe uptake [40 pmol Fe (g Chl a)-’ h-l] decreased by an order of magnitude in l-2 d after Fe was added, demonstrating that these rates were under physiological regulation and were elevated in response to low Fe concentrations. Addition of Fe increased carbon uptake and the short-term N-specific NO,- uptake rate by 2-9 times. These physiological stimulations were confined to large phytoplankton (> 3 pm), which thus must have been Fe-limited in situ. N03- uptake rate and biomass of small phytoplankton were unaffected by Fe enrichment. The results thus suggest that the low biomass, N03- -rich condition of the equatorial Pacific Ocean exists because low Fe concentrations limit use of N03- by large phytoplankton and favor growth of small phytoplankton that are grazed efficiently and use NH,+ preferentially.

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