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Microbial biomass, photosynthesis and chlorophyll a related pigments in the ponds of the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 May 2004

C. Howard-Williams
Affiliation:
Taupo Research Laboratory, DSIR, P.O. Box 415, Taupo, New Zealand
R. Pridmore
Affiliation:
Water Quality Centre, DSIR, P.O. Box 11–115, Hamilton, New Zealand
M.T. Downes
Affiliation:
Taupo Research Laboratory, DSIR, P.O. Box 415, Taupo, New Zealand
W.F. Vincent
Affiliation:
Taupo Research Laboratory, DSIR, P.O. Box 415, Taupo, New Zealand

Abstract

The extensive ablation zone on the McMurdo Ice Shelf (78°S, 165°30′E) contains numerous ponds that are lined with benthic mats of cyanobacteria and associated micro-organisms. The photoautotrophic biomass content of these mats was examined in six contrasting ponds. Particulate carbon contributed only 3.2% of the mat dry weight, with C:N ratios generally less than 20:1. The chlorophyll a content was low relative to carbon (chlorophylla : C<0.01). Analysis of the mats by high performance liquid chromatography [HPLC] showed that the pigment fraction assayed spectrophotometrically as chlorophyll a contained large quantities (up to 70%) of the degradation product chlorophyllide a and the epimer chlorophyll a'. Photosynthetic rates per unit chlorophyll a[HPLC] were extremely slow: <0.1 mg C (mg Chla)−1, less than one tenth the rates recorded in the overlying phytoplankton community. These analyses indicate that in the ice pond benthic mats most of the dry weight is inorganic, most of the organic carbon is non-chlorophyll-containing material, and much of the chlorophyll a is not photosynthetically active. Cold temperatures and the associated low activity of herbivores and detritivores may contribute towards this preservation of inactive chlorophyll a on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, and perhaps in similar benthic mats in the lakes and streams of southern Victoria Land.

Type
Papers—Life Sciences and Oceanography
Copyright
© Antarctic Science Ltd 1989

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