Microscale patchiness leads to large and important intraspecific internal nutrient heterogeneity in phytoplankton Journal Article


Authors: Bucci, V.; Nunez-Milland, D.; Twining, B. S.; Hellweger, F. L.
Article Title: Microscale patchiness leads to large and important intraspecific internal nutrient heterogeneity in phytoplankton
Abstract: Phytoplankton stoichiometry or nutrient content has been shown to vary in a number of dimensions (species, condition, time, space), but the heterogeneity within a species at a given time and location, and the underlying mechanisms and importance have not been explored. There are a number of mechanisms that can create intraspecific heterogeneity, and theory suggests it can affect the population growth rate. We studied heterogeneity in P content of the freshwater diatom Cyclotella meneghiniana in the Charles River in Boston. Single-cell observations using synchrotron-based X-ray fluorescence show that the nutrient status varies from P-starved to P-replete. We simulate individual cells using an agent-based model that accounts for a number of mechanisms that can create heterogeneity, including surface area-based uptake, mortality differentiation, stochastic biological variability in states and behavior, macroscale mixing, and microscale nutrient patch encounter. By performing a number of simulations with various mechanisms turned on/off and comparing to data, we conclude that the heterogeneity is mostly due to microscale patchiness (85%). We explore the importance of accounting for heterogeneity in models by performing a simulation with the growth rate based on the population-average internal nutrient, as is done in conventional population-level models. This shows that ignoring heterogeneity increases the population growth rate by a factor of 1. 47. To account for different heterogeneity in the laboratory and field, population-level ecosystem models should reduce maximum growth rates. The magnitude of this correction depends on local conditions, and in our case, it is a factor of 0. 72. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
Keywords: mortality; united states; nutritional status; massachusetts; growth rate; heterogeneity; population growth; nutrient availability; boston; agent-based modeling; phytoplankton; charles river; cyclotella meneghiniana; intraspecific heterogeneity; phytoplankton stoichiometry; synchrotron-based x-ray fluorescence; diatom; ecosystem modeling; freshwater ecosystem; patchiness; population modeling; bacillariophyta
Journal Title: Aquatic Ecology
Volume: 46
Issue: 1
ISSN: 1386-2588
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2012-01-01
Start Page: 101
End Page: 118
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s10452-011-9384-6
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 1 March 2012" - "CODEN: AQECF" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Vanni Bucci
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