The Response of Experimental Rocky Shore Communities to Nutrient Additions

Title
The Response of Experimental Rocky Shore Communities to Nutrient Additions

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2003

Authors

Bokn TL, Duarte CM, Pedersen MF, Marba N, Moy FE, Barron C, Bjerkeng B, Borum J, Christie H, Engelbert S, Fotel FL, Hoell EE, Karez R, Kersting K, Kraufvelin P, Lindblad C, Olsen M, Sanderud KA, Sommer U, Sorensen K

Journal
Ecosystems

Volume
6

Pagination
577-594

ISBN Number

Keywords

mesocosm, hard-bottom organisms, intertidal communities, nutrient enrichment, coastal eutrophication, rocky shore communities, algae, benthic vegetation, Norway, Solbergstrand, Oslofjord, 12 m3

Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine whether theexperimental nutrient enrichment of littoral rockyshore communities would be followed by a predictedaccumulation of fast-growing opportunisticalgae and a subsequent loss of perennial benthicvegetation. Inorganic nitrogen (N) and potassium(P) was added to eight concrete mesocosms inhabitedby established littoral communities dominatedby fucoids. The response to nutrient enrichmentwas followed for almost 2 1/2 years. Fast-growingopportunistic algae (periphyton and ephemeralgreen algae) grew significantly faster in response tonutrient enrichment, but the growth of red filamentousalgae and large perennial brown algae wasunaffected. However, these changes were not followedby comparable changes in the biomass andcomposition of the macroalgae. The biomass of opportunisticalgae was stimulated only marginally bythe nutrient enrichment, and perennial brown algae(fucoids) remained dominant in the mesocosmregardless of nutrient treatment level. Establishedrocky shore communities thus seem able to resistthe effects of heavy nutrient loading. We found thatthe combined effects of the heavy competition forspace and light imposed by canopy-forming algae,preferential grazing on opportunistic algae by herbivores,and physical disturbance, succeeded by amarked export of detached opportunistic algae, preventedthe fast-growing algae from becoming dominant.However, recruitment studies showed thatthe opportunistic algae would become dominantwhen free space was available under conditions ofhigh nutrient loading and low grazing pressure.These results show that established communities ofperennial algae and associated fauna in rocky shoreenvironments can prevent or delay the accumulationof bloom-forming opportunistic algae and thatthe replacement of long-lived macroalgae by opportunisticspecies at high nutrient loading may be aslow process. Nutrient enrichment may not, in itself,be enough to stimulate structural changes inrocky shore communities.

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Climate warming experiments: Design of a mesocosm heating system

Title
Climate warming experiments: Design of a mesocosm heating system
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2003
Authors

Baulch HM, Nord TW, Ackerman MY, Dale JD, Hazewinkel RRO, Schindler DW, Vinebrooke RD

Journal
Limnology and Oceanography-Methods
Volume
1
Pagination
10-15
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Abstract
Date of Published
2003
Accession Number
WOS:000202872600002
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Self-shading protects phytoplankton communities against H2O2- induced oxidative damage

Title
Self-shading protects phytoplankton communities against H2O2- induced oxidative damage

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2003

Authors

Barros MP, Pedersen M, Colepicolo P, Snoeijs P

Journal
Aquatic Microbial Ecology

Volume
30

Pagination
275-282

ISBN Number

Keywords

oxidative stress, eutrophication, phytoplankton, mesocosm, hydrogen peroxide, SOD, catalase, lipoperoxidation, Zingst marine station, Rostock, 1.4 m3, Germany

Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate whether increased phytoplankton growthrates and biomass caused by higher nutrient availability will result in lower oxidative stress inmicroalgae by reducing effective-light exposure, a process called self-shading. This hypothesis wastested by a 6 d mesocosm experiment carried out at the Zingst Marine Station, Germany (southernBaltic Sea, 8 to 9 psu) in June 2001. Out-door mesocosms filled with 1400 l of natural seawatersieved through a 100 ?m plankton net were manipulated by daily additions of nitrate and phosphate(NP treatment), and nitrate, phosphate and silicate (NPSi treatment). Oxidative stress parametersmonitored daily were H2O2 concentrations in the seawater and concentrations of superoxidedismutase (SOD) activity, catalase activity and lipoperoxidation products (thiobarbituric acid-reactivesubstances, TBARS) in the phytoplankton. Chlorophyll a (chl a) concentration, pH and photosynthesis(O2 evolution) were measured throughout the experiment to describe the physiologicalstatus of the phytoplankton. Our data suggest that fast growth of nutrient-saturated microalgaestrongly limits oxidative stress by self-shading. This was shown by significantly lower SOD andcatalase activities in the nutrient treatments than in the control treatment without nutrient additions.No differences were observed between the 2 nutrient treatments (with or without Si), despitehigher photosynthetic rates in the diatom-rich mesocosms (NPSi). Our findings may contribute to abetter understanding of the close relationships between eutrophication, the occurrence of algalblooms and antioxidant activity in microalgae.

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Alternate Journal

Biosphere 2 Center as a unique tool for environmental studies

Title
Biosphere 2 Center as a unique tool for environmental studies
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2004
Authors

Walter A, Lambrecht SC

Journal
Journal of Environmental Monitoring
Volume
6
Pagination
267-277
ISBN Number
Keywords

Biosphere 2, Arizona, USA

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Moderate increase in the biomass of omnivorous copepods may ease grazing control on planktonic algae

Title
Moderate increase in the biomass of omnivorous copepods may ease grazing control on planktonic algae
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2004
Authors

Vadstein O, Stibor H, Lippert B, Loseth K, Roederer W, Sundt-Hansen L, Olsen Y

Journal
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Volume
270
Pagination
199-207
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Keywords

copepods, ciliates, phytoplankton, algae, Omnivory, grazing, predation, Zooplankton, mesocosm, 4 m3, Hopavangen, Trondheim, Norway

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Effects of experimental greenhouse warming on phytoplankton and zooplankton in fishless alpine ponds

Title
Effects of experimental greenhouse warming on phytoplankton and zooplankton in fishless alpine ponds
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2004
Authors

Strecker AL, Cobb TP, Vinebrooke RD

Journal
Limnology & Oceanography
Volume
49
Pagination
1182-1190
ISBN Number
Keywords

climate change, higher trophic levels, Community composition, freshwater, temperature, mesocosm, 1 m3, Banff National Park, Canada

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Calanoid copepods and nutrient enrichment determine population dynamics of the appendicularian Oikopleura dioica: a mesocosm experiment

Title
Calanoid copepods and nutrient enrichment determine population dynamics of the appendicularian Oikopleura dioica: a mesocosm experiment
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2004
Authors

Stibor H, Vadstein O, Lippert B, Roederer W, Olsen Y

Journal
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Volume
270
Pagination
209-215
ISBN Number
Keywords

Oikopleura, Appendicularia, Calanoid copepods, top down, mesocosm, 5 m3, Hopavagen, Trondheim, Norway

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Copepods act as a switch between alternative trophic cascades in marine pelagic food webs

Title
Copepods act as a switch between alternative trophic cascades in marine pelagic food webs

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2004

Authors

Stibor H, Vadstein O, Diehl S, Gelzleichter A, Hansen T, Hantzsche F, Katechakis A, Lippert B, Løseth K, Peters C, Roederer W, Sandow M, Sundt-Hansen L, Olsen Y

Journal
Ecology Letters

Volume
7

Pagination
321-328

ISBN Number

Keywords

Indirect effects, meta analysis, predation, top down, trophic structure, food chain theory, mesocosm, Hopavagen, Norway, 4 m3

Abstract

A recent meta-analysis indicates that trophic cascades (indirect effects of predators on plants via herbivores) are weak in marine plankton in striking contrast to freshwater plankton (Shurin et al. 2002, Ecol. Lett., 5, 785–791). Here we show that in a marine plankton community consisting of jellyfish, calanoid copepods and algae, jellyfish predation consistently reduced copepods but produced two distinct, opposite responsesof algal biomass. Calanoid copepods act as a switch between alternative trophic cascades along food chains of different length and with counteracting effects on algal biomass.Copepods reduced large algae but simultaneously promoted small algae by feeding on ciliates. The net effect of jellyfish on total algal biomass was positive when large algae were initially abundant in the phytoplankton, negative when small algae were dominant, but zero when experiments were analysed in combination. In contrast to marine systems, major pathways of energy flow in Daphnia-dominated freshwater systems are of similar chain length. Thus, differences in the length of alternative, parallel food chains mayexplain the apparent discrepancy in trophic cascade strength between freshwater and marine planktonic systems.

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The influence of mesozooplankton in phytoplankton nutrient limitation: A mesocosm study with northeast atlantic plankton

Title
The influence of mesozooplankton in phytoplankton nutrient limitation: A mesocosm study with northeast atlantic plankton
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2004
Authors

Sommer U, Sommer F, Feuchtmayr H, Hansen T

Journal
Protist
Volume
155
Pagination
295-304
ISBN Number
Keywords

phytoplankton, Zooplankton, Nutrient limitation, nutrient enrichment, Appendicularia, mesocosm, 1.5 m3, Trondheim fjord, Norway

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