Production and decomposition of new DOC by marine plankton communities: carbohydrates, refractory components and nutrient limitation

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Production and decomposition of new DOC by marine plankton communities: carbohydrates, refractory components and nutrient limitation. / Kragh, T.; Søndergaard, Morten.

In: Biogeochemistry, Vol. 96, No. 1-3, 2009, p. 177-187.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kragh, T & Søndergaard, M 2009, 'Production and decomposition of new DOC by marine plankton communities: carbohydrates, refractory components and nutrient limitation', Biogeochemistry, vol. 96, no. 1-3, pp. 177-187. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-009-9357-1

APA

Kragh, T., & Søndergaard, M. (2009). Production and decomposition of new DOC by marine plankton communities: carbohydrates, refractory components and nutrient limitation. Biogeochemistry, 96(1-3), 177-187. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-009-9357-1

Vancouver

Kragh T, Søndergaard M. Production and decomposition of new DOC by marine plankton communities: carbohydrates, refractory components and nutrient limitation. Biogeochemistry. 2009;96(1-3):177-187. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-009-9357-1

Author

Kragh, T. ; Søndergaard, Morten. / Production and decomposition of new DOC by marine plankton communities: carbohydrates, refractory components and nutrient limitation. In: Biogeochemistry. 2009 ; Vol. 96, No. 1-3. pp. 177-187.

Bibtex

@article{a974f12031d611df8ed1000ea68e967b,
title = "Production and decomposition of new DOC by marine plankton communities: carbohydrates, refractory components and nutrient limitation",
abstract = "The accumulation and biodegradation of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and dissolved and particulate combined neutral sugars (DCNS, PCNS) were followed during a period of 22 days in experimental marine phytoplankton incubations. Five different growth regimes were established in 11 m(3) coastal mesocosms to test whether an alternate Redfield ratio with either N or P depletion and +/- diatom dominance would induce accumulation of refractory DOC (RDOC) and DCNS. The highest accumulation of DOC, DCNS and PCNS was found in the diatom dominated mesocosms. Sixteen percent of the newly accumulated DOC in the mesocosms with diatoms dominating could be explained by DCNS, while only 6% was explained in the mesocosms with few diatoms. PCNS composition was similar in all mesocosms and with dominance of glucose and mannose, while DCNS were more evenly distributed with the following mole percentages fucose 15, rhamnose 14, arabinose 6, galactose 27, glucose 20 and mannose 18%. The DCNS composition did not reflect the PCNS composition at any time during the experiment. Accumulated DCNS were quickly degraded and only 1% of the new RDOC was explained by DCNS. RDOC accumulated after day #17 in the two mesocosms driven towards the most severe P limitation both with and without silicate. This shows that RDOC can be produced directly by the phytoplankton or indirectly in food web processes during the later stages of a bloom where the phytoplankton is P limited",
author = "T. Kragh and Morten S{\o}ndergaard",
note = "Keywords Dissolved organic carbon - Autochthonous DOC - Biodegradability - Mineralisation - Refractory DOC - Dissolved combined neutral sugars (DCNS)",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1007/s10533-009-9357-1",
language = "English",
volume = "96",
pages = "177--187",
journal = "Biogeochemistry",
issn = "0168-2563",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1-3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Production and decomposition of new DOC by marine plankton communities: carbohydrates, refractory components and nutrient limitation

AU - Kragh, T.

AU - Søndergaard, Morten

N1 - Keywords Dissolved organic carbon - Autochthonous DOC - Biodegradability - Mineralisation - Refractory DOC - Dissolved combined neutral sugars (DCNS)

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - The accumulation and biodegradation of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and dissolved and particulate combined neutral sugars (DCNS, PCNS) were followed during a period of 22 days in experimental marine phytoplankton incubations. Five different growth regimes were established in 11 m(3) coastal mesocosms to test whether an alternate Redfield ratio with either N or P depletion and +/- diatom dominance would induce accumulation of refractory DOC (RDOC) and DCNS. The highest accumulation of DOC, DCNS and PCNS was found in the diatom dominated mesocosms. Sixteen percent of the newly accumulated DOC in the mesocosms with diatoms dominating could be explained by DCNS, while only 6% was explained in the mesocosms with few diatoms. PCNS composition was similar in all mesocosms and with dominance of glucose and mannose, while DCNS were more evenly distributed with the following mole percentages fucose 15, rhamnose 14, arabinose 6, galactose 27, glucose 20 and mannose 18%. The DCNS composition did not reflect the PCNS composition at any time during the experiment. Accumulated DCNS were quickly degraded and only 1% of the new RDOC was explained by DCNS. RDOC accumulated after day #17 in the two mesocosms driven towards the most severe P limitation both with and without silicate. This shows that RDOC can be produced directly by the phytoplankton or indirectly in food web processes during the later stages of a bloom where the phytoplankton is P limited

AB - The accumulation and biodegradation of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and dissolved and particulate combined neutral sugars (DCNS, PCNS) were followed during a period of 22 days in experimental marine phytoplankton incubations. Five different growth regimes were established in 11 m(3) coastal mesocosms to test whether an alternate Redfield ratio with either N or P depletion and +/- diatom dominance would induce accumulation of refractory DOC (RDOC) and DCNS. The highest accumulation of DOC, DCNS and PCNS was found in the diatom dominated mesocosms. Sixteen percent of the newly accumulated DOC in the mesocosms with diatoms dominating could be explained by DCNS, while only 6% was explained in the mesocosms with few diatoms. PCNS composition was similar in all mesocosms and with dominance of glucose and mannose, while DCNS were more evenly distributed with the following mole percentages fucose 15, rhamnose 14, arabinose 6, galactose 27, glucose 20 and mannose 18%. The DCNS composition did not reflect the PCNS composition at any time during the experiment. Accumulated DCNS were quickly degraded and only 1% of the new RDOC was explained by DCNS. RDOC accumulated after day #17 in the two mesocosms driven towards the most severe P limitation both with and without silicate. This shows that RDOC can be produced directly by the phytoplankton or indirectly in food web processes during the later stages of a bloom where the phytoplankton is P limited

U2 - 10.1007/s10533-009-9357-1

DO - 10.1007/s10533-009-9357-1

M3 - Journal article

VL - 96

SP - 177

EP - 187

JO - Biogeochemistry

JF - Biogeochemistry

SN - 0168-2563

IS - 1-3

ER -

ID: 18687008