Plants of Chondrus crispus Stackhouse, collected from mid-littoral
tidepools, were treated as follows. Some plants
were kept for a few weeks under controlled starvation conditions in order to
decrease their initial content of total
tissue phosphorus, then incubated for up to 48 h in phosphorus
(15 μM) and nitrogen (25 μM) enriched sea water.
Other plants were directly incubated in enriched sea water. Chemical analyses
showed that the total phosphorus
content of fresh and starved plants remained stable, reflecting the nutritional
status of the plants. The predominant
acid-soluble phosphate fraction was larger in fresh than in starved plants.
The content of acid-soluble
polyphosphates, similar in both types of plants at the beginning of the
experiment, doubled in starved plants, and
increased by a factor of 2·7 in fresh plants, over 48 h. The content of
acid-insoluble polyphosphates was lower than
that of acid-soluble polyphosphates.
Transmission electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray microanalysis
confirmed the presence, mostly in
medullary cells, of acid-insoluble polyphosphates in the form of cytoplasmic
granules and precipitates along the
plasmalemma, particularly near pit plugs. This is the first report of such
phosphorus storage structures in a red macroalgal species.