Publication | Open Access
Detection of extracellular phosphatases in natural spring phytoplankton of a shallow eutrophic lake (Donghu, China)
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Citations
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References
2005
Year
BiologyEutrophicationLimnologyShallow Eutrophic LakeNatural Spring PhytoplanktonBloom EcologyExtracellular PhosphatasesWater QualityMicrobiologyUnusual Dinoflagellate BloomAlgal BiologyCyanobacteriaPhotosynthesisPhytoplankton EcologySubtropical Polymictic LakeHealth Sciences
The species-specific production of extracellular phosphatases in phytoplankton of a subtropical polymictic lake was investigated from March to May 2004. Phosphatase activity was detected directly at the site of enzyme action using the enzyme-labelled fluorescence (ELF) technique. Size fractionation of bulk phosphatase activity (PA), concentrations of soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP), chlorophyll a, and phytoplankton composition were determined in parallel. Phosphatase-positive cells were present in every phytoplankton sample; labelled cells were detected in 33 algal taxa, including many chlorophytes, dinoflagellates and some diatoms, but never among cyanobacteria. We recorded an unusual dinoflagellate bloom (Peridiniopsis sp.), of which ∼25% of the cells were phosphatase-positive. Several populations were partly phosphatase-positive whenever present, while some other species never showed any activity. The production of extracellular phosphatases was not primarily regulated by ambient P concentrations; algae produced these enzymes even if SRP concentrations were high. Moreover, heterotrophic nanoflagellates most probably contributed to the pool of particle-bound PA in some samples.
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