𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
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Autotrophic picoplankton community dynamics in a pre-alpine lake in British Columbia, Canada

✍ Scribed by J. G. Stockner; K. S. Shortreed


Book ID
104613609
Publisher
Springer
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
739 KB
Volume
274
Category
Article
ISSN
1573-5141

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✦ Synopsis


Autotrophic picoplankton (APP) were studied in Chilko Lake, a large, deep ultra-oligotrophic pre-alpine lake (elevation: 1172 m) in the south central coast mountains of British Columbia. Data from 1985 (untreated) and 1990 (treated) were used to compare and contrast APP community response to a whole-lake fertilization experiment. The APP communities of Chilko Lake were dominated by the coccoid cyanobacteria Synechococcus and its colonial morph which comprised about 99% of the APP community of Chilko Lake. Chlorella-like eukaryotic picoplankters and small cyanobacteria were rare, comprising < 1 % of the APP community. In 1990 autotrophic picoplankters contributed an average of 73 % to total chlorophyll, and 54% to total photosynthesis. Average APP abundance ranged from lows of 4,000-5,000 cells ml-' in winter and spring to highs of 50000-150000 cells ml-in early August with no apparent autumnal increase. APP populations were uniformly distributed in the epilimnion, but during calm periods in August often formed a peak near the metalimnion/hypolimnion boundary. Seasonal and vertical distribution patterns of APP showed little relation to temperature or to light. When nutrients were added to the lake in 1990, APP populations doubled within 3 wk of addition and average abundance (6.16 x 104cells β€’ ml-) was twice 1985 APP numbers. Bottom-up control by scarce nutrient supplies is considered the primary factor regulating community composition and abundance during the initial population growth phase (June, July) with top-down control by grazing during nutrient colimitation periods when the epilimnion is deplete of both nitrogen and phosphorus (August, September).


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