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Calcification rate in <i>Emiliania huxleyi</i> Lohmann in response to light, nitrate and availability of inorganic carbon

99

Citations

13

References

1993

Year

Abstract

SUMMARY The relationship between photosynthesis and calcification was investigated in a high‐calcifying strain of Emiliania huxleyi. At pH 8.3 and a photon flux density of 50 μmol m −2 s −1 calcification and photosynthetic 14 CO 2 fixation were carbon saturated at 1 mM DIC (dissolved inorganic carbon) but at a photon flux density of 300 μmol m −2 s −1 calcification and photosynthetic 14 CO 2 fixation were not saturated at the DIC concentration of sea‐water, 2 mM. When HCO 3 − provides the bulk of inorganic carbon the stoichiometry between photosynthetic 14 CO 2 fixation and calcification was 1:1. In the high‐calcifying strain of E. huxleyi the stoichiometry between photosynthetic 14 CO 2 fixation and O 2 evolution was 2:1 but in a low calcifying strain the stoichiometry was 1:1. High nitrate concentrations, i.e. 1000 μM were required to inhibit calcification. The optimum pH for calcification and photosynthetic 14 CO 2 fixation was 7.8. From the results a model is proposed in which a molecule of HCO 3 − is the precursor of calcite in the coccolith vesicle with the extrusion of H + into the cytosol, while another HCO 3 − provides CO 2 in the chloroplast with the extrusion of OH − . The interaction of these processes maintains cytoplasmic pH near neutrality.

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