Stoichiometric nutrient ratios are the consequence of myriad interacting processes, both biotic and abiotic. Theoretical explanations for autotroph stoichiometry have focused on species' nutrient requirements but have not addressed the role of nutrient availability in determining autotroph stoichiometry. Remineralization of organic N and P supplies a significant fraction of inorganic N and P to autotrophs, making nutrient recycling a potentially important process influencing autotroph stoichiometry. To quantitatively investigate the relationship between available N and P, autotroph N:P, and nutrient recycling, we analyze a stoichiometrically explicit model of autotroph growth, incorporating Michaelis-Menten-Monod nutrient uptake kinetics, Droop growth, and Liebig's law of the minimum. If autotroph growth is limited by a single nutrient, increased recycling of the limiting nutrient pushes autotrophs toward colimitation and alters both autotroph and environmental stoichiometry. We derive a steady state relationship between input stoichiometry, autotroph N:P, and the stoichiometry of organic losses that allows us to estimate the relative recycling of N to P within an ecosystem. We then estimate relative N and P recycling for a marine, an aquatic, and two terrestrial ecosystems. Preferential P recycling, in conjunction with greater relative P retention at the organismal and ecosystem levels, presents a strong case for the importance of P to biomass production across ecosystems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/528967 | DOI Listing |
Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod
September 2024
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, 37831, USA.
Background: Clostridium autoethanogenum is an acetogenic bacterium that autotrophically converts carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon dioxide (CO) gases into bioproducts and fuels via the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway (WLP). To facilitate overall carbon capture efficiency, the reaction stoichiometry requires supplementation of hydrogen at an increased ratio of H:CO to maximize CO utilization; however, the molecular details and thus the ability to understand the mechanism of this supplementation are largely unknown.
Results: In order to elucidate the microbial physiology and fermentation where at least 75% of the carbon in ethanol comes from CO, we established controlled chemostats that facilitated a novel and high (11:1) H:CO uptake ratio.
Sci Total Environ
November 2024
Dept. River Ecology, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Magdeburg 39114, Germany.
Groundwater inflow can be a significant source of nutrients for riverine ecosystems, which can affect eutrophication i.e., the elevated primary production and the corresponding accumulation of algal biomass.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
November 2023
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Weizmann Institute of Science, 7610001 Rehovot, Israel.
The rate of primary productivity is a keystone variable in driving biogeochemical cycles today and has been throughout Earth's past. For example, it plays a critical role in determining nutrient stoichiometry in the oceans, the amount of global biomass, and the composition of Earth's atmosphere. Modern estimates suggest that terrestrial and marine realms contribute near-equal amounts to global gross primary productivity (GPP).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Plant Biol
September 2023
Faculty of Biology, Department of Plant Taxonomy and Nature Conservation, University of Gdańsk, ul. Wita Stwosza 59, Gdańsk, 80-308, Poland.
Background: Mycorrhiza is a ubiquitous form of symbiosis based on the mutual, beneficial exchange of resources between roots of autotrophic (AT) plants and heterotrophic soil fungi throughout a complex network of fungal mycelium. Mycoheterotrophic (MH) and mixotrophic (MX) plants can parasitise this system, gaining all or some (respectively) required nutrients without known reciprocity to the fungus. We applied, for the first time, an ecological stoichiometry framework to test whether trophic mode of plants influences their elemental carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) composition and may provide clues about their biology and evolution within the framework of mycorrhizal network functioning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemosphere
October 2023
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Florence, Via di S. Marta, 3, 50139, Firenze, Italy.
In the present study, the stoichiometry of the Sulphur Oxidizing-Nitrate Reducing (SO-NR) process, with a focus on Partial Autotrophic Denitrification (PAD), has been evaluated through a thermodynamic-based study whereas a model-based approach has been adopted to assess process kinetics. Experimental data on process performance and biomass yields were available from a previous work achieving efficient PAD, where a biomass yield of 0.113 gVSS/gS was estimated.
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