## Abstract It has been suggested that macroalgal accumulations may impact on benthic nutrient cycling by promoting remineralization of sedimentary nutrients, otherwise inaccessible, and act as sinks/sources for dissolved nutrients in the water column. However, little consideration has been given t
Production by microphytobenthos in the Swan–Canning Estuary
✍ Scribed by R. J. Masini; Arthur J. McComb
- Book ID
- 102264499
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 266 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6087
- DOI
- 10.1002/hyp.290
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Intact sediment cores containing microphytobenthos, dominated by episammic diatoms, were collected from shallow sand flats of the Swan–Canning Estuary, Perth, southwestern Australia, and their photosynthesis–light relations deduced from changes in oxygen (17 cores) or pH (13 cores). The theoretical saturating light intensity I~k~ determined from O~2~ was 107 µE m^−2^ s^−1^, and the light intensity at which photosynthesis is saturated, I~sat~, was about 1100 µE m^−2^ s^−1^. Mean gross production and respiration increased with temperature. Infaunal contributions to total respiration were measured for two cores at about 30%.
The sediment photic zone was estimated as 0·5 mm in fine sediments of the upper estuary and 3·5 mm in coarse sediments of the lower estuary. Microalgae from below the photic zone photosynthesized on exposure to light. Biomass (measured as chlorophyll a) decreased down the sediment profile and was linearly correlated with net and gross maximum photosynthesis. Relative photosynthetic efficiencies were high, and light compensation increased with increasing depth in the sediment.
Q~10~ values estimated from both net oxygen and carbon dioxide flux decreased with increasing temperature. Highest and lowest Q~10~ values were for respiration and net production derived from pH measurements. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Spring chlorophyte‐, summer dinophyte‐ and autumn cryptophyte‐dominated phytoplankton blooms occurring in the upper reaches of the Swan–Canning Estuary have been studied to compare species composition and diurnal distribution and to determine preferential uptake rates for different nitr
## Abstract Salinity in the Swan–Canning Estuary, Western Australia, varies seasonally from freshwater conditions in winter up to the salinity of seawater in summer. Field observations show that the resulting seasonal density contrasts between the estuary and the adjacent fresh groundwater system a