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  • paleolimnology  (73)
  • rotifers  (58)
  • Nitrogen fixation
  • nitrogen
  • Springer  (206)
  • Blackwell Publishing Ltd
  • 1990-1994  (66)
  • 1980-1984  (140)
  • 1925-1929
  • 1991  (66)
  • 1983  (140)
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  • Springer  (206)
  • Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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  • 1990-1994  (66)
  • 1980-1984  (140)
  • 1925-1929
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  • 1
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    Entomologia experimentalis et applicata 61 (1991), S. 7-16 
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: Plutella xylostella ; Trichoplusia ni ; Hellula phidilealis ; Artogeia rapae ; nitrogen ; population growth ; cabbage
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effects of different nitrogen (N) fertilization rates (0, 45, 90, and 168 kg N/ha), plant nitrogen concentration, and plant biomass on abundance and population growth of diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.), cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni (Hübner), cabbage budworm, Hellula phidilealis (Walker), imported cabbageworm, Artogeia rapae (L.), and cross-striped cabbageworm, Evergestis rimosalis (Guenée), were investigated in Homestead and Sanford, Florida in 1987. The effects of these factors on the parasitization of P. xylostella were also examined. In Homestead, abundance of most insect pests and parasitized P. xylostella increased with an increase in the level of N applied and with an increase in plant biomass. Similar results were found in Sanford, although results were not consistently significant. Abundance of most insect pests was significantly positively correlated with plant N concentration. Multiple regression analyses indicated that foliar biomass was significantly more important than N fertilization rate and subsequent plant N concentration at predicting abundance of insect pests and parasitized P. xylostella on cabbage.
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  • 2
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    Aquatic sciences 53 (1991), S. 263-272 
    ISSN: 1420-9055
    Keywords: Lake ecosystem ; chl-a ; phosphorus ; nitrogen ; river flow ; thermocline ; simulation model ; multiple regression
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The management variables which primarily affect phytoplankton biomass (as chl-a) in Lake Mjøsa, Norway, are total phosphorus loading (TP) and the timing and volume of water through flow (by active storage reservoirs). The response of the lake to changes in these factors is studied using a simulation model of the lake ecosystem. Chl-a responses from both observed data and the simulated results are extracted by multiple regression. Results show that decreasing TP load decreases chl-a, but less at low TP levels (〈 10 mg TP · m−3). There is also a certain time period for peak river flow which gives the least yield of chl-a per unit TP. This time period occurs in early summer (i.e., around June 10) if the total phosphorus load is low, and later if the load is high. Both observations and simulation results show that a high water flow increases chl-a at low epilimnion depths (〈 15 m), but that the same high water flow decreases chl-a when epilmnion is deep.
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  • 3
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    Journal of paleolimnology 5 (1991), S. 1-9 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: Chrysophyceae ; stomatocyst ; statospore ; cyst ; reproduction ; sex ; ecology ; paleolimnology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Chrysophyte algae produce siliceous resting cysts (stomatocysts) that are becoming an increasingly useful class of paleoecological indicator microfossils. This paper provides a review of the role that stomatocysts play in the life cycle and reproductive ecology of freshwater planktonic chrysophytes. Such information provides paleolimnologists with greater insight into the ecology of the vegetative, planktonic growth phase of species contributing stomatocysts to lacustrine microfossil assemblages. Specific chrysophyte reproductive characteristics discussed include: temporal dynamics of vegetative growth and encystment, cyst induction, cyst survivorship, germination requirements and recruitment strategies. This information serves as an introduction to a special issue of the Journal of Paleolimnology which is dedicated to the ‘Application of Chrysophyte Stomatocysts in Paleolimnology’.
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  • 4
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    Journal of paleolimnology 5 (1991), S. 19-72 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; lakes ; resting cysts ; algae ; Chrysophyceae taxonomy ; stratigraphy ; acidification ; ecology ; stomatocyst ; statospore
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Relationships between surface sediment cyst assemblages and lakewater characteristics were studies in 50 lakes located in central Ontario. The main purposes of the study were to identify the environmental factors most strongly controlling the distribution of chrysophycean cysts and to develop indices and equations to infer lake water pH from cyst assemblages. Principal components analysis indicates that alkalinity and associated TDS as well as elements related to trophic status are the factors most strongly correlated with the distribution of chrysophycean cysts. There are significant differences in the relative importance of these factors among the lakes. The transfer functions developed provide good prediction of pH values. This report also provides a descriptive analysis of the ‘fossil’ chrysophycean cyst flora of Ontario lakes. The descriptions include representative SEM micrographs and detailed characterization of each morphotype in consideration of the morphological variation observed among specimens of the same morphotype. Special attention has been paid to the anatomy of the collar complex and to the nature of the cyst surface ornamentation. One hundred and thirty seven morphotypes are described.
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  • 5
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    Journal of paleolimnology 5 (1991), S. 115-126 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: Lake Lahontan ; lake-level change ; climate change ; paleolimnology ; paleohydrology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Radiocarbon and uranium-series ages of a variety of materials from the Lahontan basin indicate that the last highstand lake occurred between 14 500 and 13 000 yr B.P. Although few in number, existing radiocarbon and uranium-series age data also indicate that lakes in the western Lahontan subbasins were small or moderate in size between 30 000 and 25 000 yr B.P. Existing data do not support the conclusions of Bradbury et al. (1989) who did not find evidence of a 14 000±yr B.P. highstand lake in the sediments of the Walker Lake subbasin. These data also do not support the existence of a highstand lake in the Walker Lake subbasin between 30 000 and 25 000 yr B.P.
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  • 6
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    Journal of paleolimnology 6 (1991), S. 113-122 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: Bosminidae ; Chydoridae ; environmental change ; oxbow lake ; paleolimnology ; river system
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract A former meander of the Upper Rhône River, France, is completely filled with silt and occurs as a forested wetland. Bosminidae and Chydoridae (Crustacea, Cladocera) remains are analysed from a 6-m sediment core that reaches coarse sand and gravel layers deposited by running water. The lower layer of fine sediment, deposited by still water after the meander had been cut off, was dated at 1666±211 BC. The likely end of aquatic succession was dated at 800±150 AD. The results, processed using Factorial Correspondence Analysis, suggest 3 phases during the aquatic succession. Phase I, corresponding to open water conditions, is very short. The following phases, indicating the development of macrophyte stands, then a decrease in depth, extend much longer. The unexpectedly long duration (1000–2000 years) of these macrophyte-dominated and marshy phases may be explained by a progressive rise in the mean water level of the Rhône River. The causes of this water level rise may be related to climatic and/or fluvial dynamics changes.
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  • 7
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    Journal of paleolimnology 6 (1991), S. 199-204 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; Baffin Island ; Arctic Canada ; Fragilaria
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Diatom analyses from a 40 cm sediment core from ‘Water Supply Lake’, northeastern Baffin Island, reveal 67 taxa of primarily benthic forms, strongly dominated by small Fragilaria spp. No major stratigraphic changes are noted in the diatom floral record, which encompasses the last 7000 years. In the uppermost 2 cm, there are increases in: a) F. virescens var. subsalina, b) the ratio of symmetric: asymmetric valves of F. construens, and c) species richness. These are interpreted as reflecting anthropogenic modifications of the lake (chlorination and deepening) associated with its use as a source of water for the community of Pond Inlet since 1979.
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  • 8
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    Journal of paleolimnology 5 (1991), S. 255-262 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; lake acidification ; logging ; watershed disturbance ; Adirondacks
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Holmes Lake, Adirondack Mountains, New York, is a clear-water acidic lake that was treated with lime in 1983 to permit stocking of trout. Diatom assemblages in dated sediments reflect three anthropogenic modifications of the lake ecosystem: 1) assemblages from the mid- and late 1800's are associated with historical and sedimentary records of forest clearance, and indicate slightly increased pH; 2) acidobiontic species increase in sediments from the mid-1900's, a period of local reforestation and regionally increasing anthropogenic acid loading; 3) liming caused large increases of circumneutral periphytic species in the first growing season, and decreases of acidobiontic species by the second.
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  • 9
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    Journal of paleolimnology 5 (1991), S. 263-266 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: scaled chrysophytes ; road salt ; Fonda Lake ; Michigan ; paleolimnology ; sediment
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Chrysophyte scales were identified and enumerated from the recent sediments of Fonda Lake, Michigan. This lake has undergone marked salinification due to chloride intrusion from an adjacent salt-storage facility established in 1953. From 1950 to 1980, Mallomonas caudata dominated at all levels; this taxon appears to be chloride-indifferent. M. elongata and M. pseudocoronata appeared to be chloride-intolerant as they declined drastically in abundance when chloride levels attained a maximum (ca. 1968–1972). M. tonsurata, on the other hand, was more competitive during this period of maximum [Cl\s-]. This preliminary study suggests that chrysophyte scales may be useful paleoindicators of salinity.
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  • 10
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    Journal of paleolimnology 6 (1991), S. 205-255 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; paleoclimate ; diatoms ; Cenozoic ; northern California
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Lacustrine diatoms are diverse, well preserved and abundant in cores of lake sediment to 334 m depth near the town of Tulelake, Siskiyou County, northern California. The cores have been dated by radiometric, tephrochronologic and paleomagnetic techniques, which indicate a basal age of about 3 million years (Ma) and a nearly continuous depositional record for the Tule Lake basin for the last 3 million years (My). Fossil diatoms document the late Cenozoic paleolimnologic and paleoclimatic history for the northwestern edge of the Basin and Range Province. During the last 3 My, Tule Lake was typically a relatively deep, extensive lake. The Pliocene is characterized by a diatom flora dominated by Aulacoseira solida suggesting more abundant summer precipitation and warmer winters. Increases in ‘Fragilaria’ at 2.4 Ma and between 2.0 and 1.7 Ma imply cooler summers that correlate to glacial environments recorded elsewhere in the world. Stephanodiscus niagarae and ‘Fragilaria’ species dominate the Pleistocene. Benthic diatoms of alkalineenriched, saline waters occur with S. niagarae between 100 and 40 m depth (0.90–0.14 Ma). Tephrochronology indicates slow deposition and possible hiatuses between about 0.6 and 0.2 Ma. Overall, the Pleistocene diatom flora reflects cooler and sometimes drier climates, especially after major glaciations began 0.85 Ma. The chronology of even-numbered oxygen isotope stages approximately matches fluctuations in the abundance in ‘Fragilaria’ species since 1 Ma, suggesting that glacial periods at Tule Lake were expressed by relatively cool summers with enhanced effective moisture. Interglacial periods are represented by variable mixtures of freshwater planktonic and benthic alkaline diatom assemblages that suggest seasonal environments with winter-spring precipitation and summer moisture deficits. Glacial-interglacial environments since 150 ka were distinct from, and more variable than, those occurring earlier. The last full glacial period was very dry. Aulacoseira ambigua characterizes the late glacial and early Holocene record of Tule Lake. Its distribution indicates that warmer and wetter climates began about 15 ka in this part of the Great Basin. Fluctuations in diatom concentration suggests a 41000-yr. cycle between 3.0 and 2.5 Ma and 100000-yr. cycles after 1.0 Ma. In the late Pliocene and early Pleistocene, Aulacoseira solida percentages wax and wane in an approximately 400000-yr. cycle. The apparent response of Tule Lake diatom communities to orbitally induced insolation cycles underscores the importance of this record for the study of late Cenozoic paleoclimate change. The diatom stratigraphy records the evolution and local extinction of several species that may be biochronologically important. Stephanodiscus niagarae first appeared and became common in the Tule Lake record shortly after 1.8 Ma. Stephanodiscus carconensis disappeared about 1.8 Ma, while Aulacoseira solida is rare in the core after about 1.35 Ma. Cyclotella elgeri, a diatom characteristic of some outcrops referred to the Yonna Formation (Pliocene), is common only near the base of the core at an age of about 3 Ma. Detection of local extinctions is complicated by reworking of distinctive species from Pliocene diatomites surrounding Tule Lake. A new species, Aulacoseira paucistriata, is described from Pliocene lake deposits in the Klamath Basin.
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  • 11
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: diatom stratigraphy ; elk populations ; erosion rates ; lead-210 dating ; paleoecology ; paleolimnology ; pollen analysis ; range management ; sediment geochemistry ; ungulates ; Yellowstone National Park
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Recent sediments of eight small lakes in the northern winter range of Yellowstone National Park were cored to examine stratigraphic records of past changes in limnology and local environment that might be attributed to grazing and other activities of elk, bison, and other large ungulates. Cores of undisturbed sediment were analyzed at close intervals to depths covering the last 100–150 years according to chronologies established by lead-210 dating. Pollen analyses were made to show change in regional vegetation, and diatom and geochemical analyses were made to reveal possible limnological changes resulting from soil erosion and nutrient input from the lake catchments. Variations in sedimentary components prior to establishment of the Park in 1872 indicate some natural variability in environmental factors e.g., erosional inputs in landslide areas west of Gardiner. All lakes had abundant nutrient inputs. After the Park was founded, fire suppression may have been responsible for small increases in pollen percentages of various conifers and Artemisia tridentata (big sagebrush) at different times in different lakes. Perceptible decreases in pollen of willow, aspen, alder, and birch at different times may reflect local ungulate browsing, although drier climatic conditions may have been a factor as well. The most striking manifestation of accelerated erosion in a catchment was found at a lake located beside a road constructed in the 1930s. In contrast to changes at this site, the record of erosion at other lakes is hardly perceptible. Changes in sediment-accumulation rates seen at most sites result from redistribution of sediment within the lake after initial deposition. In the century following Park establishment, the abundance of planktonic diatoms relative to benthic taxa varies among lakes and may reflect differential nutrient inputs or changes in lake level. Four of the five lakes analyzed for diatoms show in the last few decades an increase in planktonic relative to benthic species, implying elevated nutrient inputs. The recent flora, however, is similar to that in pre-Park levels which suggests that these lakes have not been perturbed outside their normal range. Increased nutrient supply in recent decades for at least two of the lakes is supported by the geochemical data, which show an increase in biogenic silica and in organic matter. As a whole, our investigation of the sedimentary record does not support the hypothesis that ungulate grazing has had a strong direct or indirect effect on the vegetation and soil stability in the lake catchments or on the water quality of the lakes.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: sediment facies ; sediment geochemistry ; sedimentation ; cores ; tephra stratigraphy ; hydrothermal activity ; paleolimnology ; New Zealand
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Lake Rotoiti in Taupo Volcanic Zone was formed by damming of the drainage system through the floor of Okataina Caldera. Basin sediments are predominantly silt or sand, with mineralogy consistent with derivation from local silicic rocks and airfall tephras. Sandy lithofacies around the shoreline are wave worked deposits. Sand and gravel lithofacies in deeper water and on steep slopes are largely relict or airfall tephras, or both. Profundal sediments are diatomaceous silts. Organic-rich diatomaceous silts also accumulate in near-shore wave-damped zones under weed beds. Short cores penetrated the Tarawera (1886 AD) and Kaharoa (1180 AD) Tephras, identified by their stratigraphic position, geochemistry and mineralogy. Localised slumping is evidenced from secondary tephras interbedded and redeposited within the basin silts. Sedimentation rates in the basins, estimated from the age of bounding tephras, are 0.9 to 4.0 mm y-1, and are highest under the influence of inflowing water from adjacent Lake Rotorua. For several hundred years prior to the Tarawera eruption sediment accumulation rates and the sediment geochemistry remained unchanged; deposition was predominantly biogenic opaline silica with a small terrestrial component. The Tarawera eruption deposited a terrestrial-silica, aluminum-rich primary tephra across the lake, which was followed by reworked tephra from within the catchment, the effects of which were progressively diluted by biogenic opaline silica as conditions stabilised. While the major effects of the eruption have been rapidly absorbed the lake has not returned to pre-eruption background conditions. A new equilibrium has been attained in which Tarawera Tephra continues to be eroded into the lake and is the principal source for a doubling of sedimentation rates following the eruption. High arsenic levels in some diatomaceous silts are attributed to episodic venting of hydrothermal fluids or gases into the water column.
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  • 13
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: variability ; diatoms ; chrysophytes ; acidification ; paleolimnology ; Adirondacks
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract We measured variability in the composition of diatom and chrysophyte assemblages, and the pH inferred from these assemblages, in sediment samples from Big Moose Lake, in the Adirondack Mountains of New York. Replicate samples were analyzed from (1) a single sediment core interval, (2) 12 different intervals from each of 3 separate cores, and (3) 10 widely spaced surface sediment samples (0–1 cm). The variability associated with sample preparation (subsampling, processing, and counting) was relatively small compared to between-core and within-lake variability. The relative abundances of the dominant diatom taxa varied to a greater extent than those of the chrysophyte scale assemblages. Standard deviations of pH inferences for multiple counts from the same sediment interval from diatom, chrysophyte, and diatom plus chrysophyte inference equations were 0.04 (n=8), 0.06 (n=32), and 0.06 (n=8) of a pH unit, respectively. Stratigraphic analysis of diatoms and chrysophytes from three widely spaced pelagic sediment cores provided a similar record of lake acidification trends, although with slight differences in temporal rates of change. Average standard deviations of pH inferences from diatom, chrysophyte and diatom plus chrysophyte inference equations for eight sediment intervals representing similar time periods but in different cores were 0.10, 0.20, and 0.09 pH unit, respectively. Our data support the assumption that a single sediment core can provide an accurate representation of historical change in a lake. The major sources of diatom variability in the surface sediments (i.e., top 1.0 cm) were (1) differences in diatom assemblage contributions from benthic and littoral sources, and (2) the rapid change in assemblage composition with sediment depth, which is characteristic of recently acidified lakes. Because scaled chrysophytes are exclusively planktonic, their spatial distribution in lake sediments is less variable than the diatom assemblages. Standard deviations of pH inferences for 10 widely spaced surface sediment samples from diatom, chrysophyte and diatom plus chrysophyte inference equations were 0.21, 0.09, and 0.16 of a pH unit, respectively.
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  • 14
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    Journal of paleolimnology 6 (1991), S. 123-140 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: diatoms ; paleolimnology ; eutrophication ; Great Lakes ; Green Bay ; Lake Michigan ; North America
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Quantitative analysis of siliceous microfossils in a 210Pb dated core from Green Bay of Lake Michigan shows clear evidence of eutrophication, but a different pattern of population succession than observed in the main deposition basins of the Great Lakes. Sediments deposited prior to extensive European settlement (ca A.D. 1850) contain high relative abundance of chrysophyte cysts and benthic diatoms. Quantity and composition of microfossils deposited during the pre-settlement period represented in our core is quite uniform, except for the 30–32 cm interval which contains elevated microfossil abundance and particularly high levels of attached benthic species. Total microfossil abundance and the proportion of planktonic diatoms begins to increase ca 1860 and rises very rapidly beginning ca 1915. Maximum abundance occurs in sediments deposited during the 1970's, with a secondary peak in the late 1940's — early 1950's. Increased total abundance is accompanied by increased dominance of taxa tolerant of eutrophic conditions, however indigenous oligotrophic taxa, particularly those which are most abundant during the summer, are not eliminated from the flora, as in the lower Great Lakes. It appears that a combination of silica resupply from high riverine loadings and replacement of indigenous populations by periodic intrusions of Lake Michigan water allow sequential co-existence of species usually exclusively associated with either eutrophic or oligotrophic conditions.
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  • 15
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    Journal of paleolimnology 6 (1991), S. 141-155 
    ISSN: 1573-0417
    Keywords: marl lakes ; paleolimnology ; diatom-inferred pH ; palynology ; Hypsithermal ; wetlands
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract This paper presents the first paleolimnological study of the postglacial development of a marl and peat complex on the Canadian Precambrian Shield. Ring Lake (48° 46′ N, 85° 51′ W), situated within the carbonate glacial drift area of northwestern Ontario, originated about 9000 BP in a basin exposed by the retreating waters of proglacial Lake Superior. The development of Ring Lake was interpreted from pollen and diatom analysis of one sediment core from the littoral zone and another core from near the lake centre. The sequence of postglacial vegetation development parallels published accounts of forest history in northern Ontario. The predominant diatom throughout the littoral core was the alkaliphilous Cymbella diluviana. The central core was dominated by circumneutral and alkaliphilous species of Achnanthes Navicula, Fragilaria, and Cymbella, except in recent samples where acidophilous species of Anomoeoneis were common. Diatom-inferred (DI) pH shows that the early lake was alkaline because of drainage from base-rich tills. The presence of marl in the littoral core indicates deposition of calcareous materials until the site dried out during the Hypsithermal period. There is evidence that beaver activity around 5000 BP caused a temporary change in lake hydrology. A decline in DI pH over much of the postglacial reflects gradual exhaustion of carbonates in the drainage area. An increase in acidophilous diatoms in samples representing the past 3500 y is consistent with gradual acidification of the system and development of a littoral peatland in a cooler neoglacial climate.
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  • 16
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    Nutrient cycling in agroecosystems 27 (1991), S. 189-198 
    ISSN: 1573-0867
    Keywords: Winter wheat ; nitrogen ; uptake ; simulation ; model ; soil
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Simulation of the nitrogen behavior in the soil and the nitrogen uptake by winter wheat was performed using the model ANIMO. As input for the model ANIMO simulations of the hydrological conditions in the soil crop ecosystem were executed with the model SWATRE. Compared with measured data the simulation of nitrogen uptake by the crop was satisfactory. The simulation of mineral nitrogen in the soil agreed reasonably well with measured data for one of the experiments used for the analysis. The agreement was less for experiments with additional fertilizer applications in May and June.
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  • 17
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    Nutrient cycling in agroecosystems 27 (1991), S. 129-140 
    ISSN: 1573-0867
    Keywords: Douglas-fir ; nitrogen ; mineral cycling ; growth and yield
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Forest managers in the Pacific Northwest (PNW) use fertilization as a means to increase timber yields in managed stands. Information on the biological basis for nutrient amendments and stand growth responses to fertilization is required to effectively use fertilization as a silvicultural tool, and research programs in mineral cycling and forest nutrition have been underway in the region for about four decades. Most PNW Douglas-fir forest sites are nitrogen deficient. Mineral cycling research has shown high C/N ratios and low nitrification rates for soils in the region. Research and development projects in the Pacific Northwest have produced an information base that is used to select sites and stands for fertilization and to forecast growth after treatment. Much of the basis for operational fertilization programs in western Oregon and Washington comes from cooperative research programs; current activities for these programs are directed toward improving site-specific response information. Forest fertilization in the Pacific Northwest has become a silvicultural practice of major significance over the past two decades. Forest industry and government organizations managing forest lands in western Oregon and Washington apply nitrogen fertilizer to Douglas-fir stands over a range of soil and stand types (operational fertilization of other species is minor). About 50,000 to 55,000 ha are fertilized each year, and future programs will likely be of similar magnitude. Most current plans for management regimes including fertilization call for multiple applications.
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  • 18
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    Nutrient cycling in agroecosystems 29 (1991), S. 133-138 
    ISSN: 1573-0867
    Keywords: Phaseolus vulgaris L. ; nitrogen fixation ; nitrogen ; yield components ; side-dress ; selection criteria
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract There is usually a positive yield response when N is applied to common bean plants grown on N-poor soils. Recommendations include application of some or all of the N at planting, but growth and yield responses to later applications are not well documented. From 50 to 60kg N ha−1 was applied at different growth stages to three bean lines during three years. All N treatments increased yield compared to the unfertilized control. Nitrogen applied during the vegetative stage produced higher seed yields than N applied at planting, flowering, during podfill or a split application. N applied at planting or during vegetative growth increased pod-set, while application at the vegetative and reproductive stages increased seed weight. Even though N application during the vegetative stage showed a negative effect on nodulation, there was a large shoot growth response. The lower yield from N applied at planting may have been caused by less shoot growth response as well as inhibited nodulation. Based on these results the best management system using N fertilizer was an application during vegetative growth. Further studies are needed to identify bean lines capable of high N2 fixation in the presence of N and to determine optimum amounts and timing of N application to maximize biological and economic yields.
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  • 19
    ISSN: 1573-0867
    Keywords: Canola ; irrigation ; nitrogen ; nitrogen efficiency ; yield ; oil content ; water use
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Effects of N application and water supply on yield, oil content and N accumulation by canola, cultivar Marnoo, grown on a heavy clay soil in the Goulburn Murray Irrigation Region were investigated. Treatments were rainfed (Rf) or watered at a deficit of 50 mm (40–60 mm, I50) beginning in the spring. N treatments were 0, 50, 100 or 200 kg N ha−1 at sowing or as split applications of 20/80, and 50/50 kg N ha−1 at sowing and rosette, respectively. Yield (Yg) ranged from 170 to 520 g m−2. Irrigation and N increased yield in both years. Grain yields were increased by N application on the irrigated treatments when 100 or 200 kg N ha−1 was applied. Oil concentrations ranged from a maximum of 46.4% in treatment N0 to a minimum of 40.6% in treatment N200 and was inversely related to seed N concentration. Although fertilizer N decreased oil concentration, it increased the yield of oil. Nitrogen accumulation (Nb) limited yield of all treatments and was described by the equation, Yg = 806[1-EXP(−0.039*Nb)]. This implied a decrease in yield per unit of Nb at the higher rates of fertilizer addition with consequent increases in grain N concentration. The efficiency of water use in the production of grain (WUEg) and biomass (WUEb) were 7.5 and 23 kg ha−1 mm−1 respectively. Nitrogen additions increased WUEg and WUEb in both seasons. Maximum values of 8.9 (WUEg 1986) and 26.8 (WUEb 1987) were measured from treatment N200. These data suggest that the crops made efficient use of the applied water.
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    Biodegradation 14 (1991), S. 167-191 
    ISSN: 1572-9729
    Keywords: leaf longevity ; nitrogen ; nutrient use efficiency ; phosphorus ; requirement ; retranslocation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Aboveground nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) requirement, retranslocation and use efficiency were determined for 28-year-old red oak (Quercus rubra L.), European larch (Larix decidua Miller), white pine (Pinus strobes L.), red pine (Pinus resinosa Ait.) and Norway spruce (Picea abies (L) Karst.) plantations on a similar soil in southwestern Wisconsin. Annual aboveground N and P requirements (kg/ha/yr) totaled 126 and 13 for red oak, 86 and 9 for European larch, 80 and 9 for white pine, 38 and 6 for red pine, and 81 and 13 for Norway spruce, respectively. Nitrogen and P retranslocation from current foliage ranged from 81 and 72%, respectively, for European larch, whereas red pine retranslocated the smallest amount of N (13%) and Norway spruce retranslocated the smallest amount of P (18%). In three evergreen species, uptake accounted for 72 to 74% of annual N requirement whereas for two deciduous species retranslocation accounted for 76 to 77% of the annual N requirement. Nitrogen and P use (ANPP/uptake) was more efficient in deciduous species than evergreen species. The results from this common garden experiment demonstrate that differences in N and P cycling among species may result from intrinsic characteristics (e.g. leaf longevity) rather than environmental conditions.
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    Biodegradation 14 (1991), S. 209-224 
    ISSN: 1572-9729
    Keywords: ground water ; hydrology ; nitrogen ; mass balance ; nutrient retention ; swamp
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Ground water inputs and outputs of N were studied for a small ground water discharge swamp situated in a headwater drainage basin in southern Ontario, Canada. Darcy's equation with data for piezometers was used to measure inputs of shallow local ground water at the swamp margin and deep regional ground water beneath the swamp. Ground water flux was also quantified by measuring ground water discharge to the outlet stream draining the swamp in combination with a chemical mixing model to separate shallow and deep ground water components based on chloride differences. Estimates of shallow ground water flux determined by these two approaches agreed closely however, the piezometer data seriously underestimated the deep ground water input to the swamp. An average ground water input-output budget of total N (TN) total organic nitrogen (TON) ammonium (NH4 +-N) and nitrate (NO3 --N) was estimated for stream base flow periods which occurred on an average of 328 days each year during 1986–1990. Approximately 90% of the annual NO3 --N input was contributed by shallow ground water at the swamp margin. Deep ground water represented about 65% of the total ground water input and a similar proportion of TON and NH4 +-N inputs. Annual ground water NO3 --N inputs and outputs were similar whereas NH4 +-N retention was 4 kg ha-1 representing about 68% of annual ground water input. Annual TON inputs in ground water exceeded outputs by 7.7 kg ha (27%). The capacity of the swamp to regulate ground water N fluxes was influenced by the N chemistry of ground water inputs and the hydrologic pathways of transport within the swamp.
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    Oecologia 88 (1991), S. 451-455 
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Nitrogen fixation ; Carbon isotope ratio ; Nitrogen isotope ratio ; Acacia ; Namibia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Nitrogen (N2) fixation was estimated along an aridity gradient in Namibia from the natural abundance of 15N (δ15N value) in 11 woody species of the Mimosacease which were compared with the δ15N values in 11 woody non-Mimosaceae. Averaging all species and habitats the calculated contribution of N2 fixation (N f ) to leaf nitrogen (N) concentration of Mimosaceae averaged about 30%, with large variation between and within species. While in Acacia albida N f was only 2%, it was 49% in Acacia hereroensis and Dichrostachys cinerea, and reached 71% in Acacia melifera. In the majority of species N f was 10–30%. There was a marked variation in background δ15N values along the aridity gradient, with the highest δ15N values in the lowland savanna. The difference between δ15N values of Mimosaceae and non-Mimosaceae, which is assumed to result mainly from N2 fixation, was also largest in the lowland savanna. Variations in δ15N of Mimosaceae did not affect N concentrations, but higher δ15N-values of Mimosaeae are associated with lower carbon isotope ratios (δ13C value). N2 fixation was associated with reduced intrinsic water use efficiency. The opposite trends were found in non-Mimosaceae, in which N-concentration increased with δ15N, but δ13C was unaffected. The large variation among species and sites is discussed.
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    Biology and fertility of soils 11 (1991), S. 210-215 
    ISSN: 1432-0789
    Keywords: Rhizosphere ; Maize ; Bacillus circulans ; Enterobacteriaceae ; Nitrogen fixation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary We studied the dominant diazotrophs associated with maize roots and rhizosphere soil originating from three different locations in France. An aseptically grown maize plantlet, the “spermosphere model”, was used to isolate N2-fixing (acetylene-reducing) bacteria. Bacillus circulans was the dominant N2-fixing bacterium in the rhizosphere of maize-growing soils from Ramonville and Trogny, but was not found in maize-growing sandy soil from Pissos. In the latter soil, Enterobacter cloacae, Klebsiella terrigena, and Pseudomonas sp. were the most abundant diazotrophs. Azospirillum sp., which has been frequently reported as an important diazotroph accociated with the maize rhizosphere, was not isolated from any of these soils. The strains were compared for their acetylene-reducing activity in the spermosphere model. The Bacillus circulans strains, which were more frequently isolated, also exhibited significantly greater acetylene-reducing activity (3100 nmol ethylene day-1 plant-1) than the Enterobacteriaceae strains (180 nmol ethylene day-1 plant-1). This work indicates for the first time that Bacillus circulans is an important maizerhizosphere-associated bacterium and a potential plant growth-promoting rhizobacterium.
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    Biology and fertility of soils 11 (1991), S. 273-278 
    ISSN: 1432-0789
    Keywords: Genetic variability ; N-15 methods ; Nitrogen fixation ; Provenances ; Rhizobium strains ; Gliricidia sepium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Variation in nodulation and N2 fixation by the Gliricidia sepium/Rhizobium spp. symbiosis was studied in two greenhouse experiments. The first included 25 provenances of G. sepium inoculated with a mixture of three strains of Rhizobium spp. N2 fixation was measured using the 15N isotope dilution method 12 weeks after planting. On average, G. sepium derived 45% of its total N from atmospheric N2. Significant differences in fixation were observed between provenances. The percentage of N derived from atmospheric N2 ranged from 26 to 68% (equivalent to 18–62 mg N plant-1) and was correlated with total N in the plant (r=0.70; P=0.05). The second experiment included six strains of Rhizobium spp. and two methods of inoculation and the plants were harvested 14,35 and 53 weeks after planting. In the first harvest significant differences were found between the number of nodules and the percentage and amount of N2 fixed. There was also a significant correlation between the number of nodules and the amount of N2 fixed (r=0.92; P=0.05). In the final harvest no correlation was observed, although there were significant differences between the number of nodules and the percentage of N derived from the atmosphere. The amount of N2 fixed increased with time (from an average of 27% at the first harvest to 58% at the final harvest) and was influenced by the Rhizobium spp. strain and the method of inoculation. It ranged from 36% for Rhizobium sp. strain SP 14 to 71% for Rhizobium SP 44 at the last harvest. Values for the percentage of atmosphere derived N2 obtained by soil inoculation were slightly higher than those obtained by seed inoculation.
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    Biology and fertility of soils 11 (1991), S. 306-312 
    ISSN: 1432-0789
    Keywords: Alkali soil ; Blue-green algae ; Calcium carbonate ; Gypsum ; Nitrogen fixation ; Organic matter ; Soil reclamation ; Sodic soil ; Waterlogged soil
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Virgin alkali (sodic) soils have a high pH and high exchangeable Na and are often barren. Blue-green algae, however, tolerate excess Na and grow extensively on the soil surface in wet seasons. Experiments using a highly degraded alkali soil (silt loam, pH 10.3, electrical conductivity 3.5 dS m-1, 90% exchangeable Na) were conducted in soil columns, with or without gypsum, in order to study the influence of waterlogging on the growth of indigenous and inoculated blue-green algae and hence, soil reclamation. The growth of indigenous blue-green algae was initially slow in alkali soil, due to the high pH and exchangeable Na, and depressed in gypsum-amended soil, due to excess Ca. Inoculation hastened the establishment of blue-green algae in both the unamended alkali soil and the gypsum-amended soil, overcoming the adverse influence of excess Na in the former and excess Ca in the latter. Gypsum was effective in amelioration (pH 9.05, electrical conductivity 1.2 dS m-1, 41% exchangeable Na after 11 weeks) but blue-green algae were ineffective even after 17 weeks. In combination with gypsum, blue-green algae had no additional effect, and the C and N increases due to the growth of indigenous or inoculated blue-green algae were insignificant. Alkali soil reclamation by biological methods requires mobilization of Ca from native soil calcite and the exchange of Ca for Na in the exchange complex. The ineffectiveness of blue-green algae was ascribed to their inability to mobilize Ca. It is argued that current theories favouring blue-green algae as a biological amendment to bring about alkali soil reclamation are untenable and are not comparable with an effective chemical amendment such as gypsum.
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    Biology and fertility of soils 12 (1991), S. 100-106 
    ISSN: 1432-0789
    Keywords: Azospirillum ; 15N-isotope dilution ; Nitrogen fixation ; Acetylene reduction activity ; ARA ; Rhizosphere ; Mineral nitrogen ; Oxygen tension
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Acetylene reduction activity by Azospirillum brasilense, either free-living in soils or associated with wheat roots, was determined in a sterilised root environment at controlled levels of O2 tension and with different concentrations of mineral N. In an unplanted, inoculated soil nitrogenase activity remained low, at approximately 40 nmol C2H4 h-1 per 2kg fresh soil, increasing to 300 nmol C2H4 h-1 when malic acid was added as a C source via a dialyse tubing system. The N2 fixation by A. brasilense in the rhizosphere of an actively growing plant was much less sensitive to the repressing influence of free O2 than the free-living bacteria were. An optimum nitrogenase activity was observed at 10 kPa O2, with a relatively high level of activity remaining even at an O2 concentration of 20 kPa. Both NO inf3 sup- and NH inf4 sup+ repressed nitrogenase activity, which was less pronounced in the presence than in the absence of plants. The highest survival rates of inoculated A. brasilense and the highest rates of acetylene reduction were found in plants treated with azospirilli immediately after seedling emergence. Plants inoculated at a later stage of growth showed a lower bacterial density in the rhizosphere and, as a consequence, a lower N2-fixing potential. Subsequent inoculations with A. brasilense during plant development did not increase root colonisation and did not stimulate the associated acetylene reduction. By using the 15N dilution method, the affect of inoculation with A. brasilense in terms of plant N was calculated as 0.067 mg N2 fixed per plant, i.e., 3.3% of the N in the root and 1.6% in the plant shoot were of atmospheric origin. This 15N dilution was comparable to that seen in plants inoculated with non-N2-fixing Psudomonas fluorescens.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1432-0789
    Keywords: Ulex gallii ; Legume ; Nitrogenase activity ; Nitrogen fixation ; Acetylene reduction activity ; Phosphorus fertilizer ; Forest soil
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary N2(C2H2) fixation by Ulex gallii Planchon (dwarf or autumn flowering gorse/furze) seedlings was determined following 8 months of growth (December-August) in the glasshouse in a very acid, N- and P-deficient forest soil. Application of Na2HPO4·12H2O or North African ground rock phosphate fertilizer was essential for growth, nodulation and C2H2 reduction activity. Overall, both the sodium phosphate and the rock phosphate were equally effective P sources and the maximum acetylene reduction by intact roots was measured as 4.09 and 4.69 μmol C2H4g-1 fresh weight nodule h-1, respectively. Applied NH4Cl severely inhibited nodulation and restricted acetylene reduction activity but not seedling growth. The results are discussed in relation to the spread of U. gallii in the south of Ireland and its potential as a leguminous nurse crop for Sitka spruce on the very impoverished forest soils of the region.
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    Environmental management 7 (1983), S. 177-187 
    ISSN: 1432-1009
    Keywords: Nitrogen ; Model ; Agriculture ; Mass balance ; Ground-water ; Denitrification ; Immobilization ; Dry deposition ; Nitrogen fixation ; Nitrate ; Florida
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Notes: Abstract A detailed nitrogen budget was devised for agricultural activities in the Florida peninsula, based on routine data published by state agricultural agencies. The model demonstrates that important unmonitored fluxes of nitrogen can often be calculated by mass balance on individual model compartments, and that the reasonability of poorly quantified fluxes can be assessed. The results of such models can be very useful in designing and assessing the results of field experiments and in prioritizing environmental monitoring programs.
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    Archives of microbiology 136 (1983), S. 20-25 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Hydrogen production ; Nitrogen fixation ; Hydrogen recycling ; Hydrogenase
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Mutants of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata lacking uptake hydrogenase activity have been isolated among those unable to grow photoautotrophically. Studies with these mutants showed increases in nitrogenase mediated H2 production from all substrates tested. In addition, photosynthetic synthetic growth on N2 with malate as carbon source was not affeced by the block in H2 uptake even under low light. Under these growth conditions hydrogen was observed to accumulate in mutant but not in wild-type cultures. This finding suggested that H2 was evolved by nitrogenase during N2 fixation by this photosynthetic bacterium and was efficiently recycled in the wild type.
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    Archives of microbiology 135 (1983), S. 287-292 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Cyanobacteria ; Respiration ; Nitrogen fixation ; Heterocysts ; K m for O2 ; Anabaena variabilis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Simultaneous measurements of acetylene reduction by Anabaena variabilis and the concentration of dissolved oxygen in the suspension were made using a specially designed vessel which allowed measurements under steady-state conditions. The rate of acetylene reduction in the dark increased with increasing oxygen concentrations until a maximum value was reached at 300 μM O2 (corresponding to 30% O2 in the gas phase at 35°C). This presumably results from a requirement for energy provided by respiration. Measurements of the dependence of respiration rate on dissolved oxygen concentration were made under comparable conditions using an open system to allow conditions close to steady-state to be obtained. The respiration rate of diazotrophically grown Anabaena variabilis had a dependence on oxygen concentration corresponding to the sum of two activities. These had K m values of 1.0 μM and 69 μM and values of V max of similar magnitude. Only the high affinity activity was observed in nitrate-grown cyanobacteria lacking heterocysts, and this presumably represent activity in the vegetative cells. The oxygen concentration dependence of the low affinity activity resembled that for the stimulation of acetylene reduction. We interpret this as the result of oxygen uptake by the heterocysts. The results are consistent with the idea that in intact filaments of cyanobacteria O2 enters heterocysts much more slowly than it enters the vegetative cells.
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  • 31
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Ammonia assimilation ; Lichen symbioses ; Nitrogen fixation ; 15N kinetics ; Peltigera canina
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract On following N2-incorporation and subsequent metabolism in the lichen Peltigera canina using 15N as tracer, it was found, over a 30 min period, that greatest initial labelling was into NH 4 + followed by glutamate and the amide-N of glutamine. Labelling of the amino-N of glutamine, aspartate and alanine increased slowly. Pulse-chase experiments using 15N confirmed this pattern. On inhibiting the GS-GOGAT pathway using l-methionine-dl-sulphoximine and azaserine, 15N enrichment of glutamate, alanine and aspartate continued although labelling of glutamine was undetectable. From this and enzymic data, NH 4 + assimilation in the P. canina thallus appears to proceed via GS-GOGAT in the cyanobacterium and via GDH in the fungus; aminotransferases were present in both partners. The cyanobacterium assimilated 44% of the 15N2 fixed; the remainder was liberated almost exclusively as NH 4 + and then assimilated by fungal GDH.
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    Archives of microbiology 135 (1983), S. 103-109 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: RNA polymerase ; Transcription ; Nitrogen fixation ; Symbiosis ; Rhizobium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract DNA-dependend RNA polymerase (EC 2.7.7.6) from Rhizobium japonicum was purified. The subunit structure was found to be ββ′α2σ, with the following apparent molecular weights determined by electrophoresis: M r (β and β') 150,000 each, M r (σ) 96,000, M r (α) 40,000, M r (holoenzyme) 490,000, M r (core enzyme) 380,000. The recovery of σ was 28%. RNA polymerase from aerobically grown R. japonicum cells and from nitrogen-fixing cells have the same electrophoretic properties suggesting that no chemical modification of the enzyme occurs when cells undergo this metabolic differentiation. The enzyme is Mg2+-dependent, rifampicin-sensitive, and has optimal activity at alkaline pH (8–10) and at 35–40° C. It binds strongly to bacteriophage T7 promoters, weakly to antibiotic resistance genes, and not at all to cloned R. japonicum nif DNA. Preliminary in vitro transcription experiments, including nif DNA as template, revealed that additional factors may be required for selective transcription from promoters.
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    Archives of microbiology 136 (1983), S. 219-221 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Xanthobacter ; Nitrogen fixation ; Oxygen sensitivity ; Nitrogen metabolism ; Glutamine synthetase ; Glutamate synthase
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract N2-fixation was investigated in the chemoautotrophic hydrogen bacterium Xanthobacter H4-14. N2-fixing batch cultures of this organism could only be grown at pO2 values of around 0.02 bar, and in continuous culture dissolved oxygen tensions above 16 μM were found to inhibit N2-fixation. Xanthobacter H4-14 utilized a variety of amino acids, nitrate and ammonia as nitrogen sources. Cell-free extracts from steady-state continuous cultures of ammonia grown, nitrate grown and N2-fixing Xanthobacter were assayed for the presence of ammonia assimilation enzymes. No alanine dehydrogenase or glutamate dehydrogenase activity was detected. Ammonia was assimilated exclusively via the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase pathway, irrespective of the extracellular concentration of ammonia.
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  • 34
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Nitrogen fixation ; Nitrogenase regulation ; Glutamine synthetase ; Methionine suofoximine ; Rhodospirillaceae
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Methionine sulfoximine (MSX), an irreversible inhibitor of glutamine synthetase of Rhodopseudomonas palustris restored nitrogenase activity to cells in which nitrogenase had been completely inhibited by ammonia switch-off. After addition of MSX, there was a lag period before nitrogenase activity was fully restored. During this lag, glutamine synthetase activity progressively decreased, and near the time of its complete inhibition, nitrogenase activity resumed. Nitrogenase switch-off by ammonia thus required active glutamine synthetase. Glutamine itself caused nitrogenase inhibition whose reversal by MSX depended on the relative ratio of MSX to glutamine. Unlike ammonia, glutamine inhibited nitrogenase under conditions where glutamine synthetase activity was absent. This indicates that glutamine is the effector molecule in nitrogenase switch-off, for instance by interacting with the enzymatic system for Fe protein inactivation. The effects of glutamine and MSX were also dependent on the culture age. Possible explanation for this and for the competitive effects are a common binding site within the regulatory apparatus for nitrogenase, or, in part, within a common transport system. Some observations with MSX were extended to Rhodopseudomonas capsulata and agreed with those in R. palustris.
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  • 35
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Azotobacter vinelandii ; Continuous culture ; Oxygen control ; Nitrogen fixation ; Respiratory protection
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Azotobacter vinelandii strain OP was grown in continuous culture at various dissolved oxygen concentrations of air (100% air saturation of the medium=225 ±14 μM O2). Sucrose was added as carbon source and either dinitrogen or ammonia as nitrogen sources. Irrespective of the nitrogen source steady state cultures showed the following general responses with dissolved oxygen concentrations increasing from about 1% to 30% air saturation: (i) cell protein levels, (ii) the amount of cell protein formed per sucrose consumed as well as (iii) nitrogenase activity decreased by at least a factor of two while (iv) cellular respiration increased. At higher oxygen concentrations the parameters changed only slightly, if at all. Increasing the sucrose concentration in the inflowing medium (s R) from 3 g/l to 15 g/l increased the total level of cellular respiration with nitrogen-fixing cultures but was more pronounced with ammonium-assimilating cultures. With nitrogen-fixing cultures cell protein levels increased five-fold while the ratio of protein formed per sucrose consumed as well as cellular nitrogenase activity remained unaffected. With ammonium-assimilating cultures the cell protein level was only doubled and the level of cell protein formed per sucrose consumed was decreased at the higher s R. Increasing the dilution rate at a constant oxygen concentration of 45% air saturation resulted in an almost parallel increase of both cellular respiratory and nitrogenase activity at low and moderate dilution rates. At high dilution rates nitrogenase activity increased steeply over the respiratory activity. Nitrogen-fixing cultures adapted to various oxygen concentrations were subjected to oxygen stress by increasing the oxygen concentration for 7 min. In all cases, this resulted in a complete inhibition (‘switch-off’) of nitrogenase activity. Upon restoration of the original oxygen concentration nitrogenase activity returned to a decreased level. The discussion arrives at the conclusion that some of the results are incompatible with the concept of respiratory protection of nitrogenase.
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    Archives of microbiology 136 (1983), S. 81-83 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Ammonia production ; Anabaena ; Cyanobacteria ; Nitrate reductase ; Nitrogen fixation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In the filamentous heterocystous cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. strain ATCC 33047 dinitrogen fixation and nitrate reduction are mutually exclusive processes. Nitrate promotes nitrate reductase synthesis and represses nitrogenase formation. Inhibition of ammonium assimilation by l-methionine-d,l-sulfoximine (MSX) alleviates the repressive effect of nitrate on nitrogenase synthesis, thus indicating that the nitrate effect is indirect through metabolites generated from the ammonium derived from nitrate reduction. In MSX-treated cells both nitrate reduction and dinitrogen fixation take place simultaneously, although at different sites of the filament, without any apparent competition for the required reducing power. The MSX-treated Anabaena cells generate ammonium from both nitrate and dinitrogen, simultaneously.
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  • 37
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Cyanobacteria ; Ultrastructure ; Nitrogen fixation ; Water stress ; Taxonomy ; DNA ; Plasmids
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Two strains of desiccation-tolerant coccoid cyanobacteria, Chroococcus S24, a marine form, and Chroococcus N41, a cryptoendolith isolated from a hot-desert rock, have been characterized. The mol % DNA base compositions of the strains are 47.1 and 48.9% respectively. Plasmid DNA was not detected in either strain. The pigment contents and nutritional characteristics of the strains are identical. Both lack phycoerythrinoid pigments and, in culture, behave as slow-growing halotolerant marine forms with elevated requirements for Na+, Cl−, Mg2+ and Ca2+. Sucrose was the only carbon source of those tested that supported photoheterotrophic growth. Each strain synthesizes nitrogenase under anaerobic conditions but not in air. Morphologically the two strains are indistinguishable. They are considered to be independent isolates of the same cyanobacterial species. Chroococcus N41 was studied in detail with the electron microscope. When brought to equilibrium at matric water potentials of-168 MPa and lower (to-673 MPa=c0.12a w) the protoplast shrinks, but the cells maintain the same size and diameter as those at-2,156 kPa (MN medium; control); the sheath expands and remains attached to the cell wall outer membrane by fibrils. The cell wall, cell membrane, thylakoid membranes, cyanophycin granules and carboxysomes appeared intact in desiccated cells.
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    Archives of microbiology 156 (1991), S. 270-276 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Coding regions ; Codon frequency table ; IS-like elements ; Nitrogen fixation ; Nodulation ; Repeated sequence ; Bradyrhizobium japonicum
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract To date, the sequences of 45 Bradyrhizobium japonicum genes are known. This provides sufficient information to determine their codon usage and G+C content. Surprisingly, B. japonicum nodulation and NifA-regulated genes were found to have a less biased codon usage and a lower G+C content than genes not belonging to these two groups. Thus, the coding regions of nodulation genes and NifA-regulated genes could hardly be identified in codon preference plots whereas this was not difficult with other genes. The codon frequency table of the highly biased genes was used in a codon preference plot to analyze the RSRjα9 sequence which is an insertion sequence (IS)-like element. The plot helped identify a new open reading frame (ORF355) that escaped previous detection because of two sequencing errors. These were now corrected. The deduced gene product of ORF355 in RSRjα9 showed extensive similarity to a putative protein encoded by an ORF in the T-DNA of Agrobacterium rhizogenes. The DNA sequences bordering both ORFs showed inverted repeats and potential target site duplications which supported the assumption that they were IS-like elements.
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    Archives of microbiology 156 (1991), S. 362-366 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Peribacteroid membrane ; Symbiosomes ; Grycine max ; Nitrogen fixation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Addition of ATP to intact symbiosomes isolated from soybean nodules, resulted in generation of a membrane potential (positive inside) across the peribacteroid membrane (PBM). This energisation was monitored as oxonol fluorescence quenching. The rate of fluorescence quenching was inhibited by the inclusion of permeant anions in the reaction medium. Using this inhibition as a measure of anion uptake across the PBM, the presence of a phthalonate-sensitive dicarboxylate carrier on the PBM was confirmed. Following dissipation of the membrane potential by a permeant anion, a pH gradient, measured using [14C]methylamine uptake, was slowly established across the PBM. This ΔpH was abolished by addition of an uncoupler but was insensitive to inhibitors of bacteroid respiration. The difference in pH between the external medium and the symbiosome interior was estimated to be in the range of 1–1.6 pH units. The magnitude in planta will depend on the concentrations of ATP and permeant anions in the cytosol of the host cell.
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  • 40
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    Trees 5 (1991), S. 227-231 
    ISSN: 1432-2285
    Keywords: Robinia pseudoacacia L. ; Nitrate ; Nitrogen fixation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Experiments with black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia L.) seedlings grown under strictly controlled laboratory conditions indicated that the availability of nitrate has a marked impact on nitrogen fixation. When nitrate concentrations were very low, both nodulation and seedling growth were impaired, whereas nitrate concentrations high enough to promote plant growth strongly inhibited symbiotic nitrogen fixation. When nitrate was added to the growth medium after infection, nodulation and nitrogen fixation of the seedlings decreased. This effect was even more marked when nitrate was applied before infection with rhizobia. Higher nitrogen concentrations also reduced nodule number and nodule mass when applied simultaneously with the infecting bacteria. The contribution of symbiotic nitrogen fixation to black locust shoot mass by far exceeded its effects on shoot length and root mass. When nitrate availability was very low, specific nitrogen fixation (i. e. nitrogenase activity per nodule wet weight) was improved with increasing nitrogen supply, but rapidly decreased with higher nitrogen concentrations.
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  • 41
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Glutamine synthetase ; Leghaemoglobin ; Nitrogenase ; Nitrogen fixation ; Phaseolus ; Rhizobium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The activities of glutamine synthetase (GS), nitrogenase and leghaemoglobin were measured during nodule development in Phaseolus vulgaris infected with wild-type or two non-fixing (Fix-) mutants of Rhizobium phaseoli. The large increase in GS activity which was observed during nodulation with the wild-type rhizobial strain occurred concomitantly with the detection and increase in activity of nitrogenase and the amount of leghaemoglobin. Moreover, this increase in GS was found to be due entirely to the appearance of a novel form of the enzyme (GSn1) in the nodule. The activity of the form (GSn2) similar to the root enzyme (GSr) remained constant throughout the experiment. In nodules produced by infection with the two mutant strains of Rhizobium phaseoli (JL15 and JL19) only trace amounts of GSn1 and leghaemoglobin were detected.
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  • 42
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Flavin ; Glycine (nitrogen fixation) ; Leghemoglobin ; Nitrogen fixation ; Oxygen (activated) ; Pyridine nucleotides ; Symbiosis (legume-Rhizobium)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The reduction of ferric leghemoglobin (Lb3+) from soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) nodules by riboflavin, FMN and FAD in the presence of NAD(P)H was studied in vitro. The system NAD(P)H + flavin reduced Lb3+ to oxyferrous (Lb2+ · O2) or deoxyferrous (Lb2+) leghemoglobin in aerobic or anaerobic conditions, respectively. In the absence of O2 the reaction was faster and more effective (i.e. less NAD(P)H oxidized per mole Lb3+ reduced) than in the presence of O2; this phenomenon was probably because O2 competes with Lb3+ for reductant, thus generating activated O2 species. The flavin-mediated reduction of Lb3+ did not entail production of superoxide or peroxide, indicating that NAD(P)H-reduced flavins were able to reduce Lb3+ directly. The NAD(P)H + flavin system also reduced the complexes Lb3+ · nicotinate and Lb3+ · acetate to Lb2+ · O2, Lb2+ or Lb2+ · nicotinate, depending on the concentrations of ligands and of O2. In the presence of 200 μM nitrite most Lb remained as Lb3+ in aerobic conditions but the nitrosyl complex (Lb2+ · NO) was generated in anaerobic conditions. The above-mentioned characteristics of the NAD(P)H + flavin system, coupled with its effectiveness in reducing Lb3+ at physiological levels of NAD(P)H and flavins in soybean nodules, indicate that this mechanism may be especially important for reducing Lb3+ in vivo.
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  • 43
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    Protoplasma 163 (1991), S. 82-92 
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Root nodule ; Infection process ; Extracellular matrix ; Nitrogen fixation ; Ceanothus ; Frankia ; Symbiosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Root nodules are induced in actinorhizal plants by the nitrogen-fixing actinomyceteFrankia. Nodules may be initiated by root hair infection or by intercellular penetration. InCeanothus spp. (Rhamnaceae),Frankia colonized the host root tissue by intercellular infection, in spite of the occurrence of root hairs in the infected region. The intercellular infection pathway was characterized by an extensive darkly-staining matrix which filled prominent intercellular spaces of the root cortex, gradually decreasing through a transition zone into the nodule cortex. At the ultrastructural level, most of the matrix was composed of fibrillar electron dense material. Holes or spaces occurred in the electron dense matrix, often in conjunction with apparent loosening of wall layers. Secondary cell division was observed within the root cortical cells embedded in the intercellular matrix. Unusually high levels of pectic compounds and proteins were identified histochemically in the matrix.
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  • 44
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Rhizobium meliloti ; Development ; Symbiosis ; Nitrogen fixation ; Ultrastructure ; Spontaneous nodule
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The development of spontaneous nodules, formed in the absence ofRhizobium and combined nitrogen, on alfalfa (Medicago sativa L. cv. Vernal) was investigated at the light and electron microscopic level and compared to that ofRhizobium-induced normal nodules. Spontaneous nodules were initiated from cortical cell divisions in the inner cortex next to the endodermis, i.e., the site of normal nodule development. These nodules, on uninoculated roots, were white multilobed structures, histologically composed of nodule meristems, cortex, endodermis, central zone and vascular strands. Nodules were devoid of intercellular or intracellular bacteria confirming microbiological tests. Early development of spontaneous nodules was initiated by series of anticlinal followed by periclinal divisions of dedifferentiated cells in the inner cortex of the root. These cells formed the nodular meristem from which the nodule developed. The cells in the nodule meristems divided unequally and differentiated into two distinct cell types, one larger type being filled with numerous membrane-bound starch grains, and the other smaller type with very few starch grains. There were no infection threads or bacteria in the spontaneous nodules at any stage of development. This size differentiation is suggestive of the different cell sizes seen inRhizobium-induced nodules, where the larger cell type harbours the invading bacteria and the smaller type is essential in supportive metabolic roles. The ontogenic studies further support the claim that these structures are nodules rather than aberrant lateral roots, and that plant possess all the genetic information needed to develop a nodule with distinct cell types. Our results suggest that bacteria and therefore theirnod genes are not necessarily involved in the ontogeny and morphogenesis of spontaneous and normal nodules in alfalfa.
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  • 45
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: Haematococcaceae ; palmella ; aplanospore ; acetate ; temperature ; nitrogen ; phosphate
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The freshwater green algaHaematococcus pluvialis (Strain Vischer 1923/2) grows best at high nitrate concentrations (about 0.5 to 1.0 g 1−1 KNO3), intermediate phosphate concentration (about 0.1 g 1−1 K2HPO4) and over a wide range of Fe concentrations. Low nitrate or high phosphate induce the formation of reddish palmella cells and aplanospores. Mixotrophic growth with acetate improves growth rate and final cell yield, and also stimulates the formation of the astaxanthin-containing palmella cells and aplanospores.H. pluvialis cannot grow above about 28 °C, or above a salinity of approximately 1% w/v NaCl. An increase in temperature or the addition of NaCl also stimulates the formation of palmella cells and aplanospores.
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  • 46
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: Haematococcaceae ; palmella ; aplanospore ; acetate ; temperature ; nitrogen ; phosphate
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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    Notes: Abstract The freshwater green algaHaematococcus pluvialis (Strain Vischer 1923/2) grows best at high nitrate concentrations (about 0.5 to 1.0 g 1−1 KNO3), intermediate phosphate concentration (about 0.1 g 1−1 K2HPO4) and over a wide range of Fe concentrations. Low nitrate or high phosphate induce the formation of reddish palmella cells and aplanospores. Mixotrophic growth with acetate improves growth rate and final cell yield, and also stimulates the formation of the astaxanthin-containing palmella cells and aplanospores.H. pluvialis cannot grow above about 28 °C, or above a salinity of approximately 1% w/v NaCl. An increase in temperature or the addition of NaCl also stimulates the formation of palmella cells and aplanospores.
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  • 47
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    Hydrobiologia 100 (1983), S. 169-201 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: rotifers ; saprobity ; saprobic valence ; indicative weight of species ; saprobic index ; pollution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Six hundred and twenty species and lower taxonomical units of Rotatoria found in Czechoslovakia and surrounding countries are listed alphabetically and classified according to water quality. The numerical characteristics include the saprobic valence in 10 balls, the indicative weight of species, Ii, and the individual saprobic index, Si. Rotifers are considered to be good indicators and some of them are figured on Plates 1–3. The situation is illustrated by four graphs and the relation to BOD5 values is stressed. All rotifers are aerobic organisms and occur only within limnosaprobity. They can also serve as indicators of trophic conditions. To characterize the situation in standing and slowly flowing waters a Brachionus: Trichocerca quotient is proposed. Rotifers can also be used as test organisms in toxicity experiments.
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  • 48
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Leghemoglobin ; Symbiosis ; Nitrogen fixation ; Nodulins
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Heme-deficient mutants of Rhizobium and Bradyrhizobium have been found to exhibit diverse phenotypes with respect to symbiotic interactions with plant hosts. We observed that R. meliloti hemA mutants elicit nodules that do not contain intracellular bacteria; the nodules contain either no infection threads (“empty” nodule phenotype) or aberrant infection threads that failed to release bacteria (Bar− phenotype). These mutant nodules expressed nodulin genes associated with nodules arrested at an early stage of development, including ENOD2, Nms-30, and four previously undescribed nodulin genes. These nodules also failed to express any of six late nodulin genes tested by hybridization, including leghemoglobin, and twelve tested by in vitro translation product analysis which are not yet correlated with specific cloned genes. We observed that R. meliloti leucine and adenosine auxotrophs induced invaded Fix− nodules that expressed late nodulin genes, suggesting that it is not auxotrophy per se that causes the hemA mutants to elicit Bar− or empty nodules. Because R. meliloti hemA mutants elicit nodules that do not contain intracellular bacteria, it is not possible to decide whether or not the Fix− phenotype of these nodules is a direct consequence of the failure of R. meliloti to supply the heme moiety of hololeghemoglobin. Our results demonstrate the importance of establishing the stage in development at which a mutant nodule is arrested before conclusions are drawn about the role of small metabolite exchange in the symbiosis.
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  • 49
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Gene regulation ; Nitrogen fixation ; Oxygen control ; Symbiosis ; Two-component systems
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The cloning, sequencing and mutational analysis of the Bradyrhizobium japonicum symbiotic nitrogen fixation genes fixL and fixJ are reported here. The two genes were adjacent and probably formed an operon, fixLJ. The predicted FixL and FixJ proteins, members of the two-component sensor/regulator family, were homologous over almost their entire lengths to the corresponding Rhizobium meliloti proteins (approx. 50% identity). Downstream of the B. japonicum fixJ gene was found an open reading frame with 138 codons (ORF138) whose product shared 36% homology with the N-terminal part of FixJ. Deletion and insertion mutations within fixL and fixJ led to a loss of approximately 90% wildtype symbiotic nitrogen fixation (Fix) activity, whereas an ORF138 mutant was Fix+. In fixL, fixJ and ORF138 mutant backgrounds, the aerobic expression of the fixR-nifA operon was not affected. NifA itself did not regulate the expression of the fixJ gene. Thus, the B. japonicum FixL and FixJ proteins were neither involved in the regulation of aerobic nifA gene expression nor in the anaerobic NifA-dependent autoregulation of the fixRnifA operon; rather they appeared to control symbiotically important genes other than those whose expression was dependent on the NifA protein. The fixL and fixJ mutant strains were unable to grow anaerobically with nitrate as the terminal electron acceptor. Therefore, some of the FixJ-dependent genes in B. japonicum may be concerned with anaerobic respiration.
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  • 50
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    Molecular genetics and genomics 227 (1991), S. 86-90 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Azospirillum lipoferum ; Nitrogen fixation ; nifH promoter ; NifA ; σ54
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Southern hybridization experiments strongly indicate that the regulatory region of theAzospirillum lipoferum nifH gene is located on a cloned 1.1 kbBamHI-XhoI restriction fragment. By cloning this fragment into a promoter-probe plasmid inEscherichia coli, a promoter was identified oriented towards thenifH gene. Using a set of several bacterial strains and plasmids, both NifA and the alternative σ factor, σ54, fromKlebsiella pneumoniae were shown to be required for the induction of the assumednifH promoter in this particular heterologous system. However, NtrC fromK. pneumoniae did not stimulate this promoter. No other promoter activity was detected in the direction opposite to the identified promoter, indicating that the transcription of the adjacentnifJ gene cannot be initiated from the 1.1 kbBamHI-XhoI fragment. Thus, the genesnifH andnifJ inA. lipoferum cannot be oriented divergently, in contrast to the situation in several other nitrogen-fixing bacteria.
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  • 51
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Azorhizobium caulinodans ; Electron transfer flavoprotein ; nifOfixABCX genes ; nifW homologue ; Nitrogen fixation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The nucleotide sequence of a 4.1 kb DNA fragment containing the fixABC region of Azorhizobium caulinodans was established. The three gene products were very similar to the corresponding polypeptides of Rhizobium meliloti. The C-terminal domains of both fixB products displayed a high degree of similarity with the α-subunits of rat and human electron transfer flavoproteins, suggesting a role for the FixB protein in a redox reaction. Two open reading frames (ORF) were found downstream of fixC. The first ORF was identified as fixX on the basis of sequence homology with fixX from several Rhizobium and Bradyrhizobium strains. The second ORF potentially encoded a 69 amino acid product and was found to be homologous to a DNA region in the Rhodobacter capsulatus nif cluster I. Insertion mutagenesis of the A. caulinodans fixX gene conferred a Nif− phenotype to bacteria grown in the free-living state and a Fix− phenotype in symbiotic association with the host plant Sesbania rostrata. A crude extract from the fixX mutant had no nitrogenase activity. Furthermore, data presented in this paper also indicate that the previously identified nifO gene located upstream of fixA was probably a homologue of the nifW gene of Klebsiella pneumoniae and Azotobacter vinelandii.
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  • 52
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Soybean ; Symbiosis ; Nitrogen fixation ; RFLP ; Plant genome
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The genetic locus (nts) controlling nitrate-tolerant nodulation, supernodulation, and diminished autoregulation of nodulation of soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merill) was mapped tightly to the pA-132 molecular marker using a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) detected by subclone pUTG-132a. The nts (nitrate-tolerant symbiotic) locus of soybean was previously detected after its inactivation by chemical mutagenesis. Mutant plant lines were characterized by abundant nodulation (supernodulation) and tolerance to the inhibitory effects of nitrate on nodule cell proliferation and nitrogen fixation. The large number of RFLPs between G. max line nts382 (homozygous for the recessive nts allele) and the more primitive soybean G. soja (P1468.397) allowed the detection of co-segregation of several diagnostic markers with the supernodulation locus in F2 families. We located the nts locus on the tentative RFLP linkage group E about 10 cM distal to pA-36 and directly next to marker pA-132. This very close linkage of the molecular marker and the nts locus may allow the application of this clone as a diagnostic probe in breeding programs as well as an entry point for the isolation of the nts gene.
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  • 53
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    Molecular genetics and genomics 231 (1991), S. 97-105 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Aspartate aminotransferase ; Alfalfa ; Nitrogen fixation ; Symbiosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary We have isolated an alfalfa leaf cDNA clone that encodes aspartate aminotransferase (AAT, EC 2.6.1.1) by direct complementation of an Escherichia coli aspartate auxotroph with a plasmid cDNA library. DNA sequence analysis of the recombinant plasmid, pMU1, revealed that a 1514 by cDNA was inserted in the correct orientation and in-frame with the start of the lacZ coding sequence in the vector, pUC18. The resulting fusion protein is predicted to be 424 amino acids in length with a molecular weight of 46387 Daltons. The cDNA-encoded protein has a characteristic pyridoxal phosphate attachment site motif and has substantial amino acid sequence homology to both animal and bacterial AATs. Plasmid pMUl encodes an AAT with a Km for aspartate of 3.3 mM, a Km for 2-oxoglutarate of 0.28 mM, and a pH optimum between 8.0 and 8.5. Several lines of evidence including Western blot analysis, the isoelectric point of the encoded protein, and the effect of pH on the activity of the fusion protein, suggest that the cDNA encodes the isozyme AAT-1 rather than AAT-2. Northern blot analysis showed that the aat-1 clone hybridized to a 1.6 kb transcript present in alfalfa leaves, roots and nodules. The relative concentrations of aat-1 mRNA in these tissues were 1: 2: 5, respectively. Thus, transcription of aat-1 appears to be induced during nodule development. Southern blot analysis suggested that AAT-1 in alfalfa is encoded by either a single-copy gene or a small, multigene family.
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  • 54
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Fusarium oxysporum ; nitrogen ; peas ; phosphorus ; potassium ; Pythium vexans ; Rhizoctonia solani ; root-rots
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract In field peas the application of nitrogen plus phosphorus, phosphorus plus potassium or nitrogen plus phosphorus plus potassium were effective in reducing severity of root rot caused by Rhizoctonia solani and with the combination of nitrogen plus phosphorus plus potassium in the case of Fusarium oxysporum. The fertilizers tested did not reduce disease caused by Pythium vexans or a combination of all pathogens.
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  • 55
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: ammonia volatilization ; denitrification ; grazing ; model ; nitrate leaching ; nitrogen ; simulation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The model simulates the cycling of N in grassland systems grazed by beef cattle and predicts the annual amount of N in liveweight gain, and the amounts lost through ammonia volatilization, denitrification and leaching, on the basis of fertilizer application and soil and site characteristics. It aims to provide a better understanding of the way in which these various factors interact in their influence on N transformations. The model has been programmed to run on IBM-compatible personal computers and responds rapidly to changes in input parameters. The model has been constructed from the average annual amounts of N passing through various components of the N cycle in ten field systems grazed by beef cattle. The amounts were either measured directly or were calculated from empirical sub-models, assuming a balance between inputs to, and outputs from the soil inorganic N pool. The model is given wide applicability through the inclusion of a mineralization sub-model which is sensitive to soil texture, sward age, previous cropping history, and climatic zone. Another important sub-model determines the partitioning of soil inorganic N to either plant uptake or the processes of loss: the proportion partitioned to plant uptake decreases as the total amount of soil inorganic N increases. Outputs from the model indicate that fertilizer N has a strong influence on ammonia volatilization, denitrification and leaching at a given site but that, over a range of sites with a given rate of fertilizer N, total loss and the proportions lost by the three processes are greatly influenced by the amount of N mineralized by the soil. The model indicates how fertilizer N should be matched with mineralization to limit gaseous and leaching losses and to achieve optimum efficiency of N use in grazing systems.
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  • 56
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Clover ; Fertilizer ; Lotus ; Nitrogen fertilizer ; Nitrogen fixation ; Nitrogen source ; Nodulation ; Trifolium repens
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Studies under growth cabinet conditions investigated the effect of source and concentration of nitrogen and timing of nitrogen application on the growth and nitrogen fixation byLotus pedunculatus cv. Maku andTrifolium repens cv. S184. KNO3, NaNO3 and NH4NO3 were added at transplanting at the following rates: 3.33, 7.78 and 13.33 mg N/plant. KNO3 was added at 3.33 and 7.78 mg N/plant at 0, 6, 12, 18, 24 or 30 days after transplanting. Lotus shoot weight increased with all increasing nitrogen sources but clover only responded to KNO3 and NaNO3. The root weight of both species increased with increasing KNO3 and NH4NO3. The percentage increase in lotus and clover shoot growth was greater than that of root growth when KNO3 was added within a week of transplanting. Increases in growth by both species resulted from added nitrogen except with lotus when NaNO3 was applied where increased nitrogen fixation also contributed to increased growth. Weight and number of effective nodules on both species were increased with 3.33 mg N per plant as KNO3 but nitrogen fixation was not affected. Addition of 13.33 mg N as NaNO3 reduced weight and number of effective nodules in both species and also nitrogen fixation by lotus. KNO3 increased growth and nodulation of both species when applied within one week after transplanting. Nodulated lotus plants responded to KNO3 by increasing growth but not nodulation. KNO3 appeared to affect infection and development of nodules on lotus and may affect the growth of existing nodules on clover.
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  • 57
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    Plant and soil 72 (1983), S. 321-334 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Leguminous plants ; Nitrogen fixation ; Protein ; Seed ; Yield
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Mineral nitrogen did not increase grain yield and seed protein levels ofVicia faba L. andLupinus luteus L. in field trials and pot experiments. Fixed N2 was substituted by mineral nitrogen in these cases because of inhibition of N2 fixation by mineral nitrogen. Contrary to these results mineral nitrogen increased grain yields and seed protein amounts ofLupinus albus L.,Pisum sativum L., andGlycine max. (L.) Merr. The nitrogen effect was caused at an early stage by saving energy due to inhibition of N2 fixation (measurement of gas exchange by means of IRGA). In case of the N application after flowering grain, yields and seed protein levels increased because the mineral N was an additional nitrogen source for plants. At this stage the plants had ceased fixing atmospheric nitrogen. The high sink activity of growing fruits induced a lack of assimilates in nodules (determined by means of14CO2 application). The N effect was therefore the consequence of the lower assimilate pool for supplying root nodules in these plants in comparison withVicia faba L. andLupinus luteus L. Hence it follows that response to mineral nitrogen can be a criterion for discovering more effective Rhizobium-host combinations.
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  • 58
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    Plant and soil 73 (1983), S. 431-434 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Nitrogen fixation ; 15N2 diffusion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Description / Table of Contents: Summary The kinetic of15N2 diffusion has been measured in a system similar to that for the estimation of N2 fixation in plant microorganism associations cultivated in soil. The15N2 enrichment of the soil atmosphere reached an homogenous value one hour after injection of15N2 and is identical to that obtained by calculation, indicating that no adsorption occurs in the soil particles.
    Notes: Résumé La cinétique de diffusion du15N2 est mesurée sur un système identique à ceux pouvant être utilisés pour la mesure de fixation de l'azote chez les associations plantes-microorganismes cultivées sur sol. L'enrichissement homogène de l'atmosphère du sol est obtenu une heure environ après l'injection de15N2 et correspond à l'enrichissement calculé, ce qui indique qu'aucune adsorption n'a lieu dans les particules du sol.
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  • 59
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    Plant and soil 75 (1983), S. 131-138 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Hydrogen inhibition ; Nitrogen fixation ; Peas ; Relative efficiency ; Rhizobium leguminosarum ; Root nodules
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Experiments were performed to investigate the causes of low relative efficiency, RE, in legume root nodules. Nitrogen fixing activity and RE varied with time of incubation of nodules and with different temperatures and oxygen concentrations. The effects of nitrogen concentration and carbon dioxide concentration were also examined. In each case the RE was inversely related to nitrogen fixing activity; measured by acetylene reduction. Increasing the nitrogen concentration had no effect on either nitrogen fixing activity or RE. Experiments with isolated bacteroids gave higher RE values than the whole nodules from which they were isolated. All the results were consistent with hydrogen inhibition of nitrogenase within the nodule being the cause of low RE.
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  • 60
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    Plant and soil 74 (1983), S. 395-406 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Fix− mutants ; Fix+ revertants ; Macroptilium lathyroides ; Nitrogen fixation ; Rhizobium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Eight ineffective mutant strains were isolated from N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine mutagenized cultures of cowpea Rhizobium strain 32H1. Strains CR1, CR2, CR3, CR4, CR5 and CR6 induced more, but smaller, nodules than the wild type. With the exception of strain CR2, these mutant strains reduced less than 1% of the amount of acetylene reduced by the wild type, in both the free-living and symbiotic assays. Strain CR2 reduced acetylene in the free-living assay but not in the symbiotic assay. Strains CR7 and CR8 responded variably (5–20% of the wild type) in free-living and symbiotic acetylene reduction assays. Nodules also varied from small white to normal-sized pink nodules. The phenotypic characteristics of the mutant strains were consistant with all leguminous plants tested and were stable upon reisolation from nodules. Fully effective revertants were selected from 4 of the ineffective mutant strains by the use of the leguminous plant,Macroptilium lathyroides. Serology, patterns of resistance to anti-bacterial agents, phage-typing, and antibiotic resistance markers were used to confirm strain identification.
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  • 61
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    Plant and soil 72 (1983), S. 95-105 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Acetylene reduction ; Inga jinicuil ; Nitrogen fixation ; Nodulation ; Nodule biomass ; Nutrients ; Shading ; Tropics ; Woody legume
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary A pot experiment was conducted to assess the effects of different fertilizers and soil shading on nodulation and acetylene reduction ofInga jinicuil seedlings. Initially, seedlings produced maximum nodule biomass when grown with high levels of phosphorus but reduced the most acetylene under intermediate phosphorus fertilization. These response differences, however, gradually diminished with age, being negligible when the seedlings were a year old. Nitrogen fertilization inhibited nodulation and acetylene reduction throughout the experiment. Potassium did not significantly affect nodulation, but low levels of potassium stimulated, and high levels inhibited acetylene reduction activity relative to unfertilized control plants. Neither magnesium nor molybdenum affected nodulation or acetylene reduction. Soil shading resulted in decreased nodule biomass and less nitrogen-fixing activity during summer months. However, the data suggest that shading may favour nitrogen fixation in colder periods by moderating soil temperatures. These results confirm findings from an earlier field study and show that nodulation and nitrogen-fixing activity by leguminous trees is influenced by the types and amounts of nutrients supplied. This suggests that the quantity of nitrogen fixed by leguminous shade trees in coffee plantations may be amenable to manipulation through simple management techniques.
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    Plant and soil 75 (1983), S. 309-342 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Acetylene reduction ; Amino-acid composition ; Chromosome number ; Cross-inoculation ; Growth various substrates ; Medium composition ; Nitrogen fixation ; Parasponia parviflora ; Root nodule ; Temperate Rhizobium species
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Cross-inoculation experiments withParasponia parviflora plants and a large number of Rhizobium strains isolated from legumes, mainly of temperate origin, showed that strains ofRhizobium trifolii andR. lupini could produce root nodulation in Parasponia. Root nodulation was also obtained with some tropical Rhizobium isolates such as those from Arachis and Albizzia, but not withRhizobium japonicum strains. In addition, strains ofR. leguminosarum, R. phaseoli andR. meliloti produced abnormal root nodules or pseudo-root nodules in Parasponia seedlings. All root nodules induced in Parasponia by foreign Rhizobium species lacked, however, nitrogenase activity. Testing the reverse combination Parasponia-Rhizobium on legumes yielded with regard to root nodulation negative results, except withVigna sinensis and twoMacroptilium species (M. atropurpureum andM. lathyroides). The root nodules produced in the latter legumes showed nitrogenase activity.Trema cannabina seedlings inoculated with Parasponia-Rhizobium invariably did not produce root nodules. The feasibility of Parasponia to accept foreign rhizobia bacteria or to produce pseudo-nodulation is probably genetically determined. In a karyological study it was shown thatParasponia parviflora had the chromosome number 2n=20. Growth experiments revealed thatP. parviflora can be cultivated in water culture, perlite and in soil (pot) culture. It can also be grown in agar tubes, although growth under these conditions is sometimes rather variable. Nitrogenase (C2H2) tests showed that water-culture root nodules were 5–10 times less active than those from perlite culture, soil or agar tubes. On the whole, nitrogenase activity of root nodules grown on the various substrates and receiving different treatments, was rather variable.Vigna sinensis plants inoculated with Parasponia-Rhizobium showed on basis of fresh nodule weight a 3–4 times higher nitrogenase activity as compared with the same strain on Parasponia. However, as shown by acetylene reduction tests of nodule slices, the main activity of mature Parasponia root nodules is situated in the apical part of the root nodule. On fresh weight basis the nitrogenase activity of this nodule section is of the same order as that of leguminous root nodules. Intact Parasponia plants showed higher nitrogenase activities than excised root nodules. The maximal nitrogen fixation rate ofParasponia parviflora plants was 20–25 μmol. C2H4·g−1 fresh weight nodule tissue.h−1, which value is comparable to that of legumes and higher than estimates obtained by Parasponia in the field. No decrease of the nitrogen-fixation rate was observed in Parasponia plants tested in a diurnal cycle during the 12-hours dark period. Amino-acid analyses of Parasponia root nodules showed large quantities of aspartic acid, asparagine, glutamic acid and glutamine suggesting a role of these amino acids in the nitrogen fixation or transport processes. In contrast to actinorhizal root nodules Parasponia root nodules do not contain citrulline. The latter amino acid was, however, found—although in rather low concentration—inVigna sinensis andMacroptilium atropurpureum nodules obtained withParasponia-Rhizobium.
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  • 63
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Genetic control ; Nitrogen fixation ; Pisum sativum L. ; Rhizobium Maternal effect
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary In pea cv. Afghanistan a recessive gene sym 6 prevents the full expression of nitrogenase activity in root nodules, induced byRhizobium leguminosarum strain F 13. In contrast, nitrogenase activity is fully expressed in pea cv. Iran. A comparison of the reciprocal hybrids of these two plants showed that the size of the plant was determined by the mother plant (maternal effect). Therefore the shoot weight and the total amount of nitrogen fixed are not suitable as parameters for a genetic analysis. The % nitrogen of the shoot and the specific activity of the nodules per gram of nodules are more reliable, but for practical purposes the specific activity of the nodules expressed per gram of shoot tissue can be used.
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  • 64
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    Plant and soil 133 (1991), S. 17-30 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: fertilisers ; foliage analysis ; growth studies ; Lotus ; Lupinus ; nitrogen ; nutrients ; phosphorus ; Trifolium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The phosphorus (P) responses of seven temperate perennial pasture legumes and two species of lupins were compared in a field trial over a range of nine P rates, from 0 to 800 kg ha-1. The two lupins produced more than 5 t ha-1 of dry matter in the absence of added P and showed no response to the fertiliser. In contrast, the pasture legumes initially failed to grow without added P and responded to applications of between 200 and 800 kg ha-1. At the higher rates of P, dry matter production of the pasture legumes was equivalent to that of the lupins. In the first 2 years of the trial; the most productive pasture legume species at the higher rates of added P were also the most productive at the lower rates. Phosphorus requirements for 90% of maximum yield varied greatly between species, but were closely related to maximum yield. Thus species with low P requirements for maximum yield were not necessarily P-efficient species. In the third and subsequent years of the trial Lotus corniculatus performed better than the other pasture legumes at the lower rates of added P. In contrast to other studies Lotus pedunculatus showed no ability to outyield Trifolium repens at low rates of P. Critical P concentrations of the pasture species for the late spring-early summer period declined in the order Trifolium repens (0.34%) 〉 Lotus pedunculatus (0.30%) 〉 Triofolium pratense (0.28%) 〉 Trifolium hybridum (0.27%) 〉 Trifolium ambiguum (0.26%) 〉 Lotus corniculatus (0.23%). Mineralisable nitrogen (N) levels were determined in soils under three species in the 7th year of the trial. At the lowest rates of added P, mineralisable N levels were much higher under Lupinus polyphyllus than under Trifolium repens or Lotus corniculatus. With increasing P rate, levels under the latter species increased, and at 100 kg P ha-1 were equivalent to those under the lupin with no added P.
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  • 65
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Acetylene reduction ; Glycine max L. ; Nitrogen fixation ; Soybean
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary A system for employing open-ended root chambers to measurein situ acetylene reduction rates under field conditions is described. Gas mixtures containing about 2 mbar acetylene were continuously flowed through the chambers providing a continuous record of acetylene reduction. These chambers have been used to measure acetylene reduction rates of soybeans during three growing seasons. The system has proved to be reliable with a high degree of precision. The large amount of plant-to-plant variability observed in N2 fixation research has been confirmed by the data collected with this system. However, such variability in physiological studies can be reduced by using a non-destructive system to compare the response of an individual plant with its rates before treatment.
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    Plant and soil 73 (1983), S. 117-128 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Light quality ; Nitrogen fixation ; Trifolium repens ; White clover
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    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The possibilities of using light quality treatments to gain an understanding of the mechanisms controlling the allocation of photosynthate for symbiotic nitrogen fixation were studied. White clover (Trifolium repens) plants were grown at the same photon irradiance in red, blue and green light treatments. Growth, nodulation and the carbon/nitrogen economies of the plants were measured. Both photosynthetic rates per unit leaf area and shoot-root ratios were affected by the treatments. However, the carbon/nitrogen economies of the plants and the fraction of the total plant weight allocated to nodule growth were unaffected.
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    Plant and soil 73 (1983), S. 151-153 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Acetylene reduction ; Beijerinckia ; C3 and C4 plants ; Nitrogen fixation ; Phyllosphere ; Wettability
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Nitrogen fixation on leaf surfaces of sugarcane, sorghum, ragi, bamboo and mulberry plants was determined by using acetylene reduction assay. The data revealed varying levels of positive nitrogenase activity on the surfaces. Beijerinckia was observed to be the predominant diazotroph on the leaves. No correlation between fixation rates and C3 or C4 plant species was discerned. The possiblity of improving phyllosphere nitrogen fixation has been discussed in light of the above observations.
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    Plant and soil 73 (1983), S. 299-305 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Nitrogen fixation ; Rhizobium trifolii populations
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The effectiveness ofRhizobium trifolii isolates from five locations in southern Britain representing contrasting soil types has been examined with five white clover varieties. The average effectiveness of Rhizobium isolates varied considerably as did the average productivity of plant varieties. The largest differences were, however, associated with Rhizobium population × plant variety interactions. These were often large enough to reverse relative yield differences between white clover varieties. The implications of these results for improving clover productivity in nitrogen fixation are discussed.
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    Hydrobiologia 107 (1983), S. 35-45 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: zooplankton ; rotifers ; laboratory culture ; life table ; population dynamics
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A new culture method for K. cochlearis has made it possible to study isolated animals and to investigate the population dynamics of this pelagic rotifer species. The duration of principal developmental stages diminishes continuously with temperature. Decreased survival was associated with a reduced duration of individual fecundity. The age distribution of the population shifted toward younger age intervals with higher temperatures. Growth rates had an optimum at 15°C; the population dynamics, while lower for K. cochlearis than for some other rotifers, were in good agreement with field data.
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    Hydrobiologia 107 (1983), S. 47-50 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: rotifers ; laboratory culture ; defined medium ; Keratella cochlearis
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Procedures for the continuous laboratory culture of Keratella cochlearis in a defined medium and upon an algal food are described. Culturing success appears to be a function of food availability as well as composition. This availability requirement is satisfied by the use of test tubes and inverted titration plate concavities as culture vessels. The satisfactory culture medium contains an ammonia compound as a nitrogen source.
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  • 71
    ISSN: 1573-5095
    Keywords: actinorhizae ; fertilization ; Frankia ; nitrogen ; nodulation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract To determine if inoculation increases nodulation and yield of bare-root red alder (Alnus rubra Bong.), fumigated nursery plots were treated with inoculum and ammonium sulfate (28 kg N ha−1) in a factorial experiment. Inoculum was alder soil with 100 infective units of Frankia g−1. Seedlings were evaluated for nodulation at age 10 wk and when lifted, at age 9 mo. Inoculation produced earlier and more extensive nodulation and increased seedling root collar diameter, height, and dry weight. Fertilization decreased seedling height, but did not decrease nodulation. No interaction of fertilization with inoculation was found. Inoculated unfertilized plots had the highest yield of packable seedlings (257 m−2), and uninoculated fertilized seedlings had the lowest yield (126 m−2).
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    Hydrobiologia 106 (1983), S. 43-57 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: eutrophication ; paleolimnology ; diatoms ; sediment chemistry ; peatland management
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Stratigraphy of diatoms and chemistry in the surface sediment deposited at 35 m depth in Lake Polvijärvi was studied. The existence of annual laminations or varves in the sediment allowed a precise dating of the profile. Diatoms were analysed in 0.5 cm sequences; from 0 to 16.0 cm continuously and then intermittently every fourth 0.5 cm down to 44.0 cm. Sediment chemistry (loss-on-ignition, C, N, Fe, Mn, Mg, P, chlorophyll and carotenoids) was analysed from sediment surface down to 10.5 cm of altogether 33 subsamples, each containing 1–3 varves, and spanning the period 1921–1980. From 4.5 cm depth upwards the diatom concentration strongly increases, and the plankton diatom succession from Tabellaria flocculosa through Asterionella formosa to Melosira ambigua and Fragilaria crotonensis reflects a marked eutrophication of the lake. This algal succession occurs in pace with an increase in sediment accumulation rate and changes in sediment chemistry, which indicate increased allochthonous inputs and enhanced algal production in the lake. The change of the lake ecosystem is contemporaneous with extensive peatland draining and fertilizing that was carried out on its watershed during the past two decades. Existing chemical data from a number of lakes situated within the drainage area prove that at present the treated peatlands are the main source of nutrient loading of Lake Polvijärvi. A former period with indications of slightly increased productivity of the lake was dated by varve counting to AD 1690–1910 (35–12 cm). This period (characterised by Asterionella formosa) may coincide with that of the slash-and-burn cultivation in the area.
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  • 73
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: cypress swamp ; nitrogen ; nutrient cycling ; periphytic algae ; phosphorus ; phytoplankton
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Both periphytic and planktonic algae are found in areas of the seasonally flooded Great Dismal Swamp (Virginia, U.S.A.). The dynamics of these algae were studied in a cypress stand and the periphytic algae appeared to be important as nutrient conservers. Clear temporal patterns in phytoplankton dominance were also observed.
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    Hydrobiologia 106 (1983), S. 107-114 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: subtropical ; Monogononta ; California ; Florida ; Bahamas ; rotifers
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Two new rotifer species, Lecane (Monostyla) aliger n.sp. and Proales pugio n.sp. are described from the Bahama Islands, Florida and California, and their autecology outlined. Some other rare rotifers are discussed which also prefer subtropical conditions. They are: Epiphanes clavulata, Epiphanes brachionus spinosus, Lecane crepida and Proalides tentaculatus tentaculatus. The existence of subtropical rotifer associations is discussed and supported by ecological data.
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    Hydrobiologia 210 (1991), S. 171-181 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: phytoplankton ; succession ; mixing ; silica ; enrichment ; nutrients ; nitrogen ; phosphorus ; carbon ; carbon dioxide ; bicarbonate ; light ; transparency ; cryptophytes ; diatoms ; blue green algae ; cyanophytes ; dinoflagellates ; greens ; dominance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract During the summer of 1983, cryptophytes, diatoms, cyanophytes, and the dinoflagellate, Ceratium hirundinella were most prominant among the phytoplankton of Eau Galle Reservoir. In the open water, cryptophytes and diatoms peaked in the spring, cyanophytes were most successful in the early summer, and Ceratium was dominant from mid-July until early August. In general, the sequence of events corresponded quite closely to the model of seasonal succession developed by the Plankton Ecology Group of the International Society of Limnology. To a large extent, the same pattern held in four experimental water columns. Departures from the model involved the roles of specific nutrients in diatom and cyanophyte periodicity. Diatoms began to yield to cyanophytes in late spring despite intermittent mixing and silica enrichment. Although capable of buoyancy regulation and thus well adapted to stable water columns, cyanophytes had greater increases in biomass in mixed columns, and in those columns, were most successful during a period of intermittent mixing. Cyanophyte success varied inversely with TN : TP ratios during the period of intermittent mixing, but not subsequently. By mid-July, Ceratium dominated the phytoplankton of every column except that of a mixed column in which conditions favored cyanophytes and large diatom species.
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  • 76
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; 210Pb dating ; magnetic susceptibility ; core correlation ; erosion ; diatom analysis ; chlorophyll a ; eutrophication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Slapton Ley, a coastal lake in SW England, has been shown by a variety of paleolimnological studies, to have become increasingly eutrophic in the period since 1950 AD. Since that time, intensification of agriculture has resulted in increased erosion of topsoil from fields in the catchment of the Ley. Sediment accumulation rates, as estimated by 210Pb-dating and multiple core correlation of peaks in whole core volume magnetic susceptibility, are equivalent to a catchment erosion rate of 13.4 t km−2 a−1, which figure agrees well with directly monitored data. Diatom and chlorophyll a analysis of the uppermost sediments shows that the Ley has recently experienced a major shift in its trophic status, changing from a clear water, macrophyte lake to one dominated by plankton in a hypertrophic system. This last point is further amplified in the paper by Heathwaite & O'Sullivan (1991).
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    Hydrobiologia 214 (1991), S. 163-169 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: diatoms ; trophic state ; paleolimnology ; Florida
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Diatom concentrations in surface sediments are positively correlated with limnetic chlorophyll a concentrations in Florida (USA) lakes. Using this relationship, I examine models that provide quantitative inferences for trophic state in historical applications. The best model predicts chlorophyll a trophic state index (TSI) values from log-transformed diatom concentrations and explains approximately half the variance in the dependent variable. Diatom accumulation rates are not better than sedimentary diatom concentrations as predictors of TSI. The entire diatom assemblage is as sensitive an indicator of TSI as are the planktonic diatoms alone. A model that considers the ecological preferences of specific taxa was found to be a better predictor than the model based on total diatom concentration. The sedimentary diatom concentration model provides a useful method for assessing historical changes in primary productivity, except in lakes where factors (e.g., silica limitation, blue-green bacterial inhibition) limited diatom production, or post-depositional changes removed sedimentary diatoms. TSI inferences are presented for sediment cores from two Florida lakes, one of which demonstrates a problematic application, and the other of which does not.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 45-51 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; magnetism ; dating ; Australia ; North America ; Japan ; Europe ; Near East
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Paleolimnomagnetic records from five regions of the world have been combined with historical magnetic field observations in order to produce regional geomagnetic master curves.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 141-146 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; lakes ; sediments ; eutrophication ; Cladocera ; Switzerland
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Species composition and density of cladoceran populations changed in Lakes Zürich, St. Mortiz and Baldegg as human populations increased in these watersheds. Lake Zürich sediments became annually laminated in the 1890's as a result of increased organic input as the size of the cities surrounding the lake grew. At the same time, the Bosmina species changed from a oligotrophic form (longispina) to a eutrophic form (longirostris). An increase in Daphnia spp. populations also occurred at this time in the lake's history. Bosmina longispina reappeared in the lake in 1965 as the lake's trophic status changed from eutrophic to mesotrophic due to effective sewage treatment facilities. Annual laminations appear in the Lake St. Moritz sediments about 1910. Shortly thereafter, a shift from B. longispina to B. longirostris occurred. This change in trophic status is associated with increased tourism in the area. Lake Baldegg sediments also show annual laminations beginning in 1885 and a similar shift in the Bosmina species. Other cladoceran remains were too scarce to be useful in interpreting the histories of these lakes.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 37-44 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; magnetic minerals ; sediment sources
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This review outlines the origin and environmental significance of magnetic minerals in lake sediments. Attention is drawn to situations where the patterns of mineral magnetic variation is a reflection of processes other than changing erosion rates and fire incidence. The use of mineral magnetic techniques in sediment source tracing, palaeoclimatic studies and the reconstruction of particulate pollution history is illustrated by means of case studies from Britain and N. America. The value of magnetic susceptibility as an on-site core logging technique is shown by reference to data from Lake Washington.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 53-58 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; secondary ferrimagnetic oxides ; S.I.R.M. ; magnetic susceptibility ; laminated sediments
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The magnetic parameters S.I.R.M. and magnetic susceptibility have been used to try and establish the fire histories of lake drainage basins. The technique is demonstrated using sediments from three lakes: Llyn Bychan (N. Wales), a lake with a recently burnt catchment, Lake Biscarrosse (S. W. France), a lake with a well documented fire history, and Lake Laukunlampi (E. Finland), a lake with laminated sediments and a long, but unknown fire history.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 59-64 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sedimentation pattern ; magnetic susceptibility ; Scanian lakes ; palaeomagnetism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Magnetic susceptibility measurements have been used to correlate synchronous depths in ca. 50 l m. cores of recent sediment from a small lake (area ca. 55 ha) in Scania, southern Sweden. The three-dimensional picture of sediment accumulation which emerges provides a basis for studying sediment deposition patterns through time. Using a palaeomagnetic chronology, the results show that the pattern and rate of accumulation have dramatically altered during the past 350 years, thus making semiquantitative studies of downcore sediment properties in a single core problematical. Possible reasons for these phenomena are briefly discussed.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 65-69 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; X-ray radiography of sediment cores ; sedimentary properties ; sediment accumulation
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract X-ray radiographs of unextruded sediment cores are used for the documentation and the interpretation of primary and secondary sedimentary structures, and for the correlation of synchronous laminations between different cores. The vertical variation in bulk density, water content and void ratio, and the increase of solids with increasing sediment depth are calculated from the recorded film density along the radiographs. The X-ray radiographic technique for the study of sedimentary properties is fast and non-destructive. The technique is especially valuable when studying the uppermost part of the sediment cover and the processes of sediment redistribution and sediment accumulation. Studies are being undertaken in several Swedish lakes and coastal bays, where mono- and stereoradiographs are being used to classify bottom and sediment types, to interpret changes in the depositional environment, and to calculate past and present rates of sediment accumulation.
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  • 84
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sediment core positioning ; hydrographic survey ; computer contouring ; morphometric calculation
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    Notes: Abstract Automated techniques for sediment core site positioning, hydrographic survey, and contour mapping are described. The computer contouring system can be extended to calculate values for morphometric variables such as maximum length (1max), maximum width (wmax), lake perimeter (10), lake area (A) and lake volume (V). The techniques are exemplified using results from Augher Lough, Northern Ireland.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 75-79 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Dead Sea climate ; pore-waters ; diffusion ; sediments ; salinity ; porosity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The salinity of lakes is subject to variations imposed by climatic changes. These variations are recorded in the salinity profile of pore waters. Meromictic lakes, such as the Dead Sea, are a special case where waters which underlie the mixolimnion reflect salinity variations. In a sediment core from Dead Sea shallow waters, the salinity profile exhibited a minimum at about 1.9 m depth. It is shown by a diffusion model that this minimum can be attributed to lower salinities which prevailed at the sediment water interface for several decades around the turn of this century. No such minimum was observed in a sediment core from the deepest part of the lake where, during the last two centuries, the overlying brines had a constant salinity.
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    Biogeochemistry 12 (1991), S. 129-134 
    ISSN: 1573-515X
    Keywords: biomass burning ; forest soils ; nitrogen ; sulphur
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The proportion of total sulphur lost during combustion (600 °C) of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) foliage is reduced from〉 90% to 65–70% as the SO4-S concentration increases from 10% to 45–50% of the total S content. Foliar SO4-S content is decreased by improvement of plant nitrogen status, suggesting that alterations to soil N availability may influence S transfer to the atmosphere during biomass burning.
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    Biogeochemistry 15 (1991), S. 21-46 
    ISSN: 1573-515X
    Keywords: denitrification ; forest ; nitrification ; nitrogen ; nitrogen mineralization ; N20 ; proton budget ; The Netherlands
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Within a long-term research project studying the biogeochemical budget of an oak-beech forest ecosystem in the eastern part of the Netherlands, the nitrogen transformations and solute fluxes were determined in order to trace the fate of atmospherically deposited NH4 + and to determine the contribution of nitrogen transformations to soil acidification. The oak-beech forest studied received an annual input of nitrogen via throughfall and stemflow of 45 kg N ha−1 yr−1, mainly as NH4 +, whereas 8 kg N ha−1 yr−1 was taken up by the canopy. Due to the specific hydrological regime resulting in periodically occurring high groundwater levels, denitrification was found to be the dominant output flux (35 kg N ha−1 yr−1). N20 emmission rate measurements indicated that 57% of this gaseous nitrogen loss (20 kg N ha−1 yr−1) was as N2O. The forest lost an annual amount of 11 kg N ha−1 yr−1 via streamwater output, mainly as N03 −. Despite the acid conditions, high nitrification rates were measured. Nitrification occurred mainly in the litter layer and in the organic rich part of the mineral soil and was found to be closely correlated with soil temperature. The large amount of NH4 + deposited on the forest floor via atmospheric deposition and produced by mineralization was to a large extent nitrified in the litter layer. Almost no NH4 + reached the subsurface soil horizons. The N03 − was retained, taken up or transformed mainly in the mineral soil. A small amount of N03 − (9 kg N ha−1 yr−1) was removed from the system in streamwater output. A relatively small amount of nitrogen was measured in the soil water as Dissolved Organic Nitrogen. On the basis of these data the proton budget of the system was calculated using two different approaches. In both cases net proton production rates were high in the vegetation and in the litter layer of the forest ecosystem. Nitrogen transformations induced a net proton production rate of 2.4 kmol ha−1 yr−1 in the soil compartment.
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  • 88
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 81-84 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; geochemistry ; trace elements
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A geochemical study of lacustrine sediments was undertaken as part of a major paleolimnological project concerned with the impact of man on lakes. Factor analysis was applied to the geochemical data obtained from a core from one lake. Three principal factors which explained most of the variance of the initial data were identified. Factor I is related to the organic:mineral component ratio of the sediment, and can be considered as an indirect index of change in lake trophic status through time. Factor II is related to the granulometric composition of the sediment and matches evidence for changes in the hydrological regime of the lake. Factor III reflects changes in redox potential and is more closely related to processes occurring within the lake than other factors. Specific geochemical associations of elements are connected with each factor and are the factor indicators. The correlation of these associations are analyzed as geochemical indices of the variability of sediment accumulation conditions in time.
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  • 89
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 91-97 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; assemblage indicators ; Finland
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Diatom assemblages from the topmost sediment of 49 lakes were ordinated by means of a program for detrended correspondence analysis and reciprocal averaging (Decorana). Five lake groups were separated, each having more or less characteristic diatom assemblages and water quality. Shifts from one group to another caused by factors such as acidification, artificial drainage, diffuse nutrient loading and sewage are discussed.
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  • 90
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 85-90 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; diatoms ; East Africa ; transfer functions ; pH-indicators
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Our purpose is to establish the quantitative relationship between recent diatom floras and ecological parameters, in order to extrapolate the results to the past. The parameter pH is here considered as an example. This work is based on the study of about I60 diatom samples from East Africa and of their corresponding biotopes. We propose some statistical methods to interpret the data. Correspondence analysis allows us to define the pH-indicator species. The regression calculations allow pH values to be calculated using the percentage of the diatom species in a sample.
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  • 91
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 99-102 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; organic matter ; bacteria ; aerobic decomposition ; oxygen consumption
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The investigations were carried out in lakes situated in the forest zone (Karelian Isthmus, Baltic zone, South Ural) and in the forest-steppe (South Ural) of the USSR. The lakes differ in their bioproductivity and in the intensity of their human influence. The amount of organic matter accumulating in the sediments is closely related to production and decomposition processes in the trophogenic layer. Processes of organic matter transformation were found to be most active in the uppermost sediment. The quantity of bacteria shows no correlation with the organic matter content of the sediment. Increase in organic matter, up to 70–80% of dry weight, is often accompanied by a decrease in bottom bacteria. The intensity of aerobic decomposition of the labile organic matter can be judged from the oxygen demand of the sediments. However, it is important to differentiate between chemical and biological oxidation processes. The quantity of bottom bacteria correlates closely with the value of oxygen consumption only in cases of high sediment redox potentials.
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  • 92
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sedimentary pigments ; primary production ; core analyses
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A statistically significant correlation of the type y = axb between sedimentary plant pigments and contemporary algal primary production has been found in a study of the recent trophic evolution of twelve Italian lakes. The equation is used to assess baseline production levels in periods (50–70 years ago) when human influence was low.
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  • 93
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 107-111 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; lake ontogeny ; lake succession ; eutrophication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Paleolimnologists frequently invoke the term ‘eutrophication’ for describing apparent enrichment phases in the history of a lake. I argue that this term is often used incorrectly and that alternative explanations can serve as more accurate descriptions. Increased organic content in the sedimentary record may result from increased nutrient availability (eutrophication), but it can also reflect decreased residence time of water, or changes in biotic interactions, or changes in lake morphometry. Additionally, I argue that ‘eutrophication’ is an inappropriate term for describing the aging process of lakes. Lake ontogeny is the preferred term, as it does not imply directional changes in nutrients, nor in community structure.
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  • 94
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; lakes ; eutrophication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Problems relating to the disappearance and eutrophication of lakes as a result of human activity are presented. A study area was selected located in an agricultural/forest region where human influence on lakes used to be minimal. In the past 25 years a number of lakes have completely disappeared and others have become rapidly enriched. Human interference has included: the pulling down of water mills, drainage and river canalisation, construction of holiday resorts, development of intensive farming, increased mineral fertilization, and the extension of roads and road traffic.
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  • 95
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 177-179 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; sediment chemistry ; heavy metals ; ATP
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This investigation is concerned with the impact of industrial and municipal waste discharge on lakes near the city of Tampere, Finland. The record of P, Zn and ATP in the recent sediments of Vanajavesi I, a polluted lake, and Mallasvesi, a largely unpolluted lake, are compared.
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  • 96
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 169-175 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Chironomidae ; subfossil remains ; shallow lake ; eutrophication ; Lake Balaton
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Lake Balaton, the largest shallow lake in Central Europe, is about 20 000 years old. An enormous increase in tourism and the disproportionate building development of the last few decades has resulted in the acceleration of eutrophication in the lake. Widespread research to reveal the causes of water-quality deterioration and possible ways of protection against it have recently started. The investigation of the larvae of non-biting midges (Diptera: Chironomidae) in the sediment of the open-water zone has also begun. The contemporary faunal composition strongly correlates with the trophic gradient along the longitudinal axis of the lake. We therefore supposed that the eutrophication process should be identifiable from the analysis of subfossil chironomid head capsules from the upper (15 cm thick) layer of the sediment. We found that quantitative results could only be obtained when fragments as well as relatively intact head capsules are considered. Our data verify that the originally oligo-mesotrophic community has been gradually replaced by eutrophic species in a west to east direction. Large-bodied larvae belonging to the Chironomus plumosus group mix the sediment down to 15 cm as they build their tubes and consequently alter the original proportions of head capsules at the different levels. So the sequence of communities through the sediment-layers is not quite reliable.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 181-184 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Clostridium perfringens ; sewage pollution ; eutrophication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The horizontal and vertical distribution of the gram-positive, non-motile, spore-forming and rod-shaped bacterium Clostridium perfringens Holland was studied. The aim of the study was to estimate the quantity of C. perfringens at different depths of the sediment and evaluate the effect of human effluent which the lake received between 1940 and 1956. C. perfringens lives in the colon of man. Because it is spore forming and cannot multiply under a temperature of 20 °C and, according to the studies of Seppänen et al. (1979) it can be at least 300 years old, it may be a suitable paleolimnological indicator of pollution by human effluent. The results showed that the amounts of Clostridium increased at the same level where redox potential decreased in the sediment due to the beginning of effluent disposal at a depth of 40 mm. The maximum number of Clostridium colonies occurred between 0–30 mm depth.
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  • 98
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 193-198 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; Lake Michigan ; geochemistry ; stratigraphy ; Quaternary ; trace elements
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The stresses placed on Lake Michigan since the advent of industrialization require knowledge of the sedimentology of the whole lake in order to make informed decisions for environmental planning. Sediment accumulation rates are low: areas of the lake receiving the most sediment average only 1 mm a−1; deep-water basins average 0.1 to 0.5 mm a−1; and large areas are not receiving any sediment. Sediment was deposited rapidly (typically 5 mm a−1), in the form of rock flour, during the deglaciation of both Lake Michigan and Lake Superior Basins. Then the rate of accumulation decreased by 80–90% and has remained relatively constant since final deglaciation. Because active sedimentation occurs mostly in the deep water areas of the lake, the sediment remains undisturbed and contains a record of the chemical history of the lake.
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  • 99
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; annual laminations ; magnetism ; sediment influx ; sediment chemistry ; eutrophication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The sediments of Loe Pool, a eutrophic coastal lake in south west England, consist largely of laminated clays and clay-gyttjas. Studies of the diatom microstratigraphy of frozen sediment cores from the Pool indicate that the laminations are annual, and that they contain pairs of light and dark bands formed by seasonal variations in the supply of sediment to the Pool from its catchment. Analysis of the magnetic properties of individual laminations demonstrates the presence of physical and mineralogical microstratigraphic variations, which may also be related to seasonality. A varve chronology, which is confirmed by 137Cs analysis and historical records, has been used to provide a timescale for the interpretation of data from other paleolimnological studies. A close agreement between variations in the abundance of sedimentary Sn, and the history of mining in the catchment, has been found. Similarly, analysis of total organic matter, total phosphorus, sedimentary chlorophyll a, sterols, diatoms and Cladocera in the uppermost sediments all indicate eutrophication of the Pool in the period AD 1940 to the present.
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    Hydrobiologia 103 (1983), S. 205-210 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: paleolimnology ; colluvium ; soil chemistry ; clay ; phosphorus loading ; tropical lakes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The long-term impact of Maya culture on a lowland tropical watershed is assessed, using data from a 9.2 m sediment core taken from deep water (28 m) in Lake Quexil. Human population growth, estimated by the 1980 archaeological survey, is associated with a shift in the composition of the sediment to a dominance by inorganic material, the Maya clay formation, beginning ca. 3500 B.P. Increasing settlement densities are correlated with accelerated influxes of phosphorus, carbonates, and siliceous sediment. However, chemical data do not track short-term population fluctuations closely. Because much of the sediment is delivered as colluvium, and not by running water, there is a lag between terrestrial disturbance and impact on the aquatic system. As an indication of this lag, contemporary high sedimentation rates are a residual of Maya activity that virtually ceased some 300–400 years B.P. Comparison of the deep-water core with a shallow-water (7 m) section, based on palynological correlation, reveals only minor differences in proximate chemical composition. Chemical influxes are much higher at the deep-water site, however, as a consequence of sediment focusing in this hyperconical basin. Chemical analyses of soil samples from 21 test pits in the Quexil basin support the principal conclusion that bulk soil movement was the mode of nutrient transfer to the lake, following forest clearance by the Maya.
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