Modelling suggests that optimization of dark nitrogen-assimilation need not be a critical selective feature in phytoplankton

New Phytol. 2002 Jul;155(1):109-119. doi: 10.1046/j.1469-8137.2002.00436.x.

Abstract

• Alternative strategies for the dark assimilation of ammonium and nitrate into microalgae are explored using a mechanistic model of algal physiology. • The standard diatom strategy, continuation of N assimilation at high rates in darkness as long as reserve C remains, is the most advantageous. The flagellate strategy, incorporating ammonium but not nitrate at a reasonable rate in darkness, is best suited to organisms with high metabolic costs, inhabiting waters with relatively high concentrations of ammonium. The strategy of vertically migrating diatoms - accumulation of nitrate in internal pools for assimilation after return to the photic zone - is best suited to slow-growing cells in low-ammonium environments. • Differences between the strategies become less significant with increasing N-source limitation (the situation more typically encountered by flagellates and migratory species) because transport rather than post-transport assimilatory processes become most limiting. • It is suggested that optimization of dark N-assimilation is not a critical selective feature; organisms with contrasting abilities in this regard usually inhabit different water bodies and have other more fundamental phenotypic differences (e.g. motility or silicon requirements).

Keywords: ammonium; assimilation; dark; growth; model; nitrate; phytoplankton.