Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Phytoplankton
- Chapter 2 Entrainment and distribution in the pelagic
- Chapter 3 Photosynthesis and carbon acquisition in phytoplankton
- Chapter 4 Nutrient uptake and assimilation in phytoplankton
- Chapter 5 Growth and replication of phytoplankton
- Chapter 6 Mortality and loss processes in phytoplankton
- Chapter 7 Community assembly in the plankton: pattern, process and dynamics
- Chapter 8 Phytoplankton ecology and aquatic ecosystems: mechanisms and management
- Glossary
- Units, symbols and abbreviations
- References
- Index to lakes, rivers and seas
- Index to genera and species of phytoplankton
- Index to genera and species of other organisms
- General index
Chapter 4 - Nutrient uptake and assimilation in phytoplankton
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Phytoplankton
- Chapter 2 Entrainment and distribution in the pelagic
- Chapter 3 Photosynthesis and carbon acquisition in phytoplankton
- Chapter 4 Nutrient uptake and assimilation in phytoplankton
- Chapter 5 Growth and replication of phytoplankton
- Chapter 6 Mortality and loss processes in phytoplankton
- Chapter 7 Community assembly in the plankton: pattern, process and dynamics
- Chapter 8 Phytoplankton ecology and aquatic ecosystems: mechanisms and management
- Glossary
- Units, symbols and abbreviations
- References
- Index to lakes, rivers and seas
- Index to genera and species of phytoplankton
- Index to genera and species of other organisms
- General index
Summary
Introduction
This chapter addresses the resource requirements for the assembly of photoautotrophic biomass. In addition to light and carbon, growth of phytoplankton consumes ‘nutrients’ and, equally, may often be constrained by their availability and fluxes. Put at the most basic level, every replication of a phytoplankton cell roundly demands the uptake and assimilation of a quota of (usually) inorganic nutrients similar to that in the mother cell, if her daughters are to have the similar composition. Ignoring skeletal biominerals for the moment, we may recall from Section 1.5.3 that, in addition to carbon, the living protoplast comprises at least 19 other elements. Some are needed in considerable abundance (hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen), others in rather smaller amounts (phosphorus, sulphur, potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium and chlorine), for the assembly and production of the organic matter of protoplasm. Others occur as vital traces in support of cellular metabolism (silicon, iron, manganese, molybdenum, copper, cobalt, zinc, boron, vanadium). However, it is less the amounts in which these elements are required that constrains growth than does the ease or otherwise with which they are obtained. It is the demand (D) relative to the supply (S) that is ultimately critical, bearing in mind that a measurable presence is not a measure of availability if the element in question is not both soluble and diffusible and, so, assimilable by cells.
There is a huge literature on this topic.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Ecology of Phytoplankton , pp. 145 - 177Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
- 6
- Cited by