The community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic plankton

A high precision technique for measuring dissolved oxygen was used in conjunction with the coulometric back titration for total inorganic carbon in seawater, to make observations of the photosynthetic and respiratory quotients in a culture and an open ocean environment. The relationship between the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wood, Emily Suzannah
Published: Bangor University 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.316726
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-316726
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-3167262019-01-04T03:19:08ZThe community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic planktonWood, Emily Suzannah1992A high precision technique for measuring dissolved oxygen was used in conjunction with the coulometric back titration for total inorganic carbon in seawater, to make observations of the photosynthetic and respiratory quotients in a culture and an open ocean environment. The relationship between the PQ and the nitrogen source utilised was assessed by the concomitant measurement of nitrogen assimilation by the 15-N mass spectrometric technique, with the aim of resolving some of the uncertainty surrounding the calculated and observed PQ values. For the most part the PQ values were found to lie within the constraints set by theory. A complete resolution of the exact relationship between the PQ and the nitrogen source was limited by the analysis of the ambient NH3 concentrations. Measurements of community production and respiration were made in the N.E.Atlantic as part of the BOFS programme. concomitant 14-C rate measurements were made, enabling a comparison of the methodologies. The comparison of the oxygen and 14-C technique was found to be affected by the magnitude of the respiration rate, resulting in elevated PQ values. The in vitro techniques employed in this study were compared to in situ techniques for the analysis of the fluxes of oxygen and carbon dioxide. It was confirmed that the in vitro techniques were not a serious or overriding cause for concern. The productivity rate measurements from the oxygen technique were used to assess the critical depths which are consistent with the development of the phytoplankton bloom. A relationship was observed between the critical depth and the net community production rate.551.46OceanographyBangor Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.316726https://research.bangor.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/the-community-photosynthetic-quotient-and-the-assimilation-of-nitrogen-by-oceanic-plankton(c8ee5ea0-745b-4477-8ae6-d19d95f88bd1).htmlElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 551.46
Oceanography
spellingShingle 551.46
Oceanography
Wood, Emily Suzannah
The community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic plankton
description A high precision technique for measuring dissolved oxygen was used in conjunction with the coulometric back titration for total inorganic carbon in seawater, to make observations of the photosynthetic and respiratory quotients in a culture and an open ocean environment. The relationship between the PQ and the nitrogen source utilised was assessed by the concomitant measurement of nitrogen assimilation by the 15-N mass spectrometric technique, with the aim of resolving some of the uncertainty surrounding the calculated and observed PQ values. For the most part the PQ values were found to lie within the constraints set by theory. A complete resolution of the exact relationship between the PQ and the nitrogen source was limited by the analysis of the ambient NH3 concentrations. Measurements of community production and respiration were made in the N.E.Atlantic as part of the BOFS programme. concomitant 14-C rate measurements were made, enabling a comparison of the methodologies. The comparison of the oxygen and 14-C technique was found to be affected by the magnitude of the respiration rate, resulting in elevated PQ values. The in vitro techniques employed in this study were compared to in situ techniques for the analysis of the fluxes of oxygen and carbon dioxide. It was confirmed that the in vitro techniques were not a serious or overriding cause for concern. The productivity rate measurements from the oxygen technique were used to assess the critical depths which are consistent with the development of the phytoplankton bloom. A relationship was observed between the critical depth and the net community production rate.
author Wood, Emily Suzannah
author_facet Wood, Emily Suzannah
author_sort Wood, Emily Suzannah
title The community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic plankton
title_short The community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic plankton
title_full The community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic plankton
title_fullStr The community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic plankton
title_full_unstemmed The community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic plankton
title_sort community photosynthetic quotient and the assimilation of nitrogen by oceanic plankton
publisher Bangor University
publishDate 1992
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.316726
work_keys_str_mv AT woodemilysuzannah thecommunityphotosyntheticquotientandtheassimilationofnitrogenbyoceanicplankton
AT woodemilysuzannah communityphotosyntheticquotientandtheassimilationofnitrogenbyoceanicplankton
_version_ 1718805366768140288