6533b82afe1ef96bd128bfdd

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Phytoplankton primary production in a eutrophic cooling water pond

Pertti ElorantaRiitta Salminen

subject

Chlorophyll aeducation.field_of_studyPopulationQ10Aquatic ScienceSeasonalityBiologymedicine.diseasePhotosynthesisbiology.organism_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundAnimal scienceDiatomchemistryBotanyPhytoplanktonmedicineEutrophicationeducation

description

The seasonal variation of phytoplankton photosynthesis was measured with 14C-method in a warmed ice-free pond in central Finland. Simultaneously with in situ measurements the photosynthesis was also measured in an incubator with different water temperatures and constant light (ca. 16 W m−2). The total annual photosynthesis was 57.2 C m−2 a−1. The portion of the winter and spring production of the annual photosynthesis was 18.4%, that of the autumn production ws 17.4%. Thus 64.3% of the total annual phytoplankton photosynthesis occurred in the three summer months. The range of the daily integrated photosynthesis per unit area was 1.9—563 mg C m−2d−1. The photosynthetic rate per unit chlorophyll a varied in situ from 0.94 to 33.1 mg C (mg chl. a)−1 d−1. The highest value was measured in the beginning of July and the lowest in mid-January. The photosynthetic rate increased in situ exponentially with increasing water temperature. In the incubator the highest photosynthetic rate values were also found in July and August (at+20 °C) when the phytoplankton population was increasing and the minimum values occurred after every diatom maximum both in spring and autumn. Light was a limiting factor for photosynthesis from September to Mid-January, low water temperature was a limiting factor from late January through May. The efficiency of the photosynthesis varied between 0.1 and 0.7% of P.A.R. According to the incubator experiments the Q10 values for the photosynthesis were 2.45 and 2.44 for the winter population between 1 and 10° C and for the summer population between 5 and 15° C, respectively, but the Q10 values decrease at the higher temperatures. The main effect of the warm effluents on the yearly photosynthesis was the increase of production in spring months due to the lack of ice cover. However, the increase of total annual phytoplankton photosynthesis was only ca. 10–15%, because the water temperature was during the spring months below 10° C.

https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00046624