Estuaries are among the most productive ecosystems and dynamic environments on Earth. Varying salinity is the most important challenge for phytoplankton survival in estuaries. In order to investigate the role… Click to show full abstract
Estuaries are among the most productive ecosystems and dynamic environments on Earth. Varying salinity is the most important challenge for phytoplankton survival in estuaries. In order to investigate the role of iron nutrition on phytoplankton survival under salinity stress, a freshwater cyanobacterial strain was cultivated in media added with different proportions of seawater (measured with siderophore activities), and supplied with gel-immobilized ferrihydrite as iron source. Results showed that the strain grew well in media with 0% seawater supplied with ferrihydrite as iron source. Surprisingly, the biomasses in media with 50% seawater, with more newly excreted siderophore, were similar to those with 0% seawater, but better than those with 6.25%, 12.5% and 25% seawater. Smaller iron isotopic discriminations between the cyanobacterial cells associated iron and dissolved iron were observed in media with 0% and 50% seawater suggested that higher fractions of iron uptake from aqueous dissolved iron reservoir by these comparatively larger biomasses. In summary, this study proved that iron availability plays a key role in cyanobacterial survival under varying salinity stress, and suggested that siderophores introduced by seawater may accelerate iron dissolution, increase iron availability, and make cyanobacterial cells overcome the adverse effects of high-salinity, and indicated that siderophore excretion a kind of survival strategy for phytoplankton in face of salinity stress.
               
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