Publication - Decomposition in situ of the sublittoral Antarctic macroalgaDesmarestia anceps Montagne
Abstract
Large amounts of detached Antarctic macroalgae accumulate in hollows of the seabed, where decomposition rates of the detached macroalgae are expected to be low, caused by lack of contact of the major part of the macroalgae with the sediment. To determine decomposition rates in Antarctic waters, untreated and pre-killedDesmarestia anceps fronds contained in nylon net bags were studied for 10 months under natural conditions in Factory Cove, Signy Island. Physical decomposition was shown to be more important than microbial decomposition. A weight loss of 40% occurred in untreated material within 313 days, while prekilled material almost all disappeared within 90 days. Despite the weight loss, changes in chlorophylla content were negligible during the experiment. Changes in the C:N ratio and tissue N indicated low rates of microbial decomposition. Therefore, it was concluded that weight loss was mainly caused by fragmentation, and particles disappearing from the nets accounted for most of the loss of original tissue. It remains unknown as to how long nutrients stay in Antarctic macroalgal litter before they become available to the system.
Authors
Name | Organization |
P.E.M. Brouwer | Centre for Estuarine and Coastal Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-CEME) |
Datasets
Title | Start date | End date |
Antarctic Coastal Ecology | 1990-10-01 | 1996-01-01 |
Projects
No projects linked to this publication yetExternal resource
Publication type
Journal Article
Date
1996-02-01
Journal
Polar Biology
Volume
16
Issue
2
Pages
129-137