Volumes and Issues  Contents of Issue 4  Special Issue  
Biogeosciences Discuss., 3, 1247-1277, 2006
www.biogeosciences-discuss.net/3/1247/2006/
© Author(s) 2006. This work is licensed
under a Creative Commons License.


DON as a source of bioavailable nitrogen for phytoplankton

D. A. Bronk1, J. H. See2, P. Bradley1, and L. Killberg1
1Department of Physical Sciences, The College of William and Mary, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, P.O. Box 1346, Gloucester Point, VA 23062, USA
2Geo-Marine Inc., 550 East 15th Street, Plano, TX 75074, USA

Abstract. Relative to inorganic nitrogen, concentrations of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) are often high, even in regions believed to be nitrogen-limited. The persistence of these high concentrations led to the view that the DON pool was largely refractory and therefore unimportant to plankton nutrition. What DON is utilized was believed to fuel bacterial production. More recent work, however, indicates that rates into and out of the DON pool can be large, and that the constancy in concentration is a function of tightly coupled production and consumption processes. Evidence is also accumulating that indicates phytoplankton, including a number of harmful species, may obtain a substantial part of their nitrogen nutrition from organic compounds. Ongoing research is investigating ways to discriminate between autotrophic and heterotrophic utilization, as well as a number of mechanisms such as cell surface enzymes and photochemical decomposition, that could facilitate phytoplankton use of DON components.

Discussion Paper (PDF, 393 KB)   Interactive Discussion (Closed, 4 Comments)   Final Revised Paper (BG)

Citation: Bronk, D. A., See, J. H., Bradley, P., and Killberg, L.: DON as a source of bioavailable nitrogen for phytoplankton, Biogeosciences Discuss., 3, 1247-1277, 2006.   Bibtex   EndNote   Reference Manager

Recent Papers