How to translate text using browser tools
1 March 2008 Nutritive Substitution of Zinc by Cadmium and Cobalt in Phytoplankton Isolated from the Lower Great Lakes
Asha Intwala, Tara D. Patey, Damien M. Polet, Michael R. Twiss
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Low ambient concentrations of trace metals including Zn may limit phytoplankton productivity in the North American Great Lakes. The microalgae Chlorella sp. UTCC 522 (Chlorophyta) and Cyclotella sp. UTCC 520 (Heterokontophyta), indigenous to the Great Lakes, were assayed for their Zn requirement and the ability for Co and Cd to metabolically substitute for Zn under conditions in which Zn bioavailability was limiting cell growth. Bioassays were conducted in the laboratory using chemically defined media and the metal buffer EDTA to control the free-ion concentrations of Zn2 (10−15.3–10−10 mol/L), Cd2 (10−15.1–10−10 mol/L), and Co2 (10−14–10−10 mol/L). Influence of the metals on the phytoplankton was measured by the effect on specific growth rate. Both microalgae required Zn and could use Co and Cd as Zn substitutes; Cd was used less-effectively, although to a greater extent by the diatom Cyclotella than by the chlorophyte, Chlorella. The observed ability of the phytoplankton to use Cd and Co as Zn substitutes suggests that microalgae play an important role in the geochemical cycling of Zn, Cd and Co in large lakes, and the mobilization of Cd in lake ecosystems impacted by pollution.

Asha Intwala, Tara D. Patey, Damien M. Polet, and Michael R. Twiss "Nutritive Substitution of Zinc by Cadmium and Cobalt in Phytoplankton Isolated from the Lower Great Lakes," Journal of Great Lakes Research 34(1), 1-11, (1 March 2008). https://doi.org/10.3394/0380-1330(2008)34[1:NSOZBC]2.0.CO;2
Received: 6 November 2006; Accepted: 1 October 2007; Published: 1 March 2008
JOURNAL ARTICLE
11 PAGES

This article is only available to subscribers.
It is not available for individual sale.
+ SAVE TO MY LIBRARY

KEYWORDS
Chlorella
Cyclotella
growth
Lake Erie
Lake Ontario
nutrition
phytoplankton
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top