1. Phosphorus and nitrogen effects on microbial euendolithic communities and their bioerosion rates.
- Author
-
Carreiro-Silva M, Kiene WE, Golubic S, and McClanahan TR
- Subjects
- Animal Shells, Animals, Bacteria drug effects, Bacteria growth & development, Belize, Biodegradation, Environmental drug effects, Ecosystem, Environmental Monitoring, Eutrophication, Fungi drug effects, Fungi growth & development, Fungi physiology, Microalgae drug effects, Microalgae growth & development, Microalgae physiology, Nitrogen analysis, Phosphorus analysis, Seawater chemistry, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis, Nitrogen pharmacology, Phosphorus pharmacology, Water Pollutants, Chemical pharmacology
- Abstract
Cages and fertilizers were used at Glover's Atoll, Belize to test the relative importance of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) to microbial euendolithic communities (bacteria, algae and fungi) and their bioerosion rates of Strombus gigas shells after 56-days of exposure. By the end of the experiment, the abundance of green algae was higher than cyanobacteria and fungi in N and N+P treatments, although green algae did not increase proportionally with increasing N concentrations, suggesting that green algae were co-limited by P and N. In contrast, cyanobacteria abundance increased with increasing P concentration, suggesting that cyanobacteria were P-limited. Fungi were not significantly affected by the addition of nutrients. Microbioerosion rates in the N and N+P treatments were 2-times greater than rates in the P treatment and 15-times greater than the control treatment. Results demonstrate that increased nutrient concentrations on coral reefs may increase microbioerosion rates, and variations in nutrient ratios can modify microborers community composition., (Copyright © 2011. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2012
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