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Research Product

Kroer, Niels. 1994. Relationships Between Biovolume and Carbon and Nitrogen Content of Bacterioplankton. FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 13(3):159-240. (ERL,GB X787).

Cell volume, carbon and nitrogen content were determined for bacteria grown in batch cultures in water samples collected at five localities in western Florida, USA. Cultures were set up by inoculating 0.2 µm filtered water with 2.5 to 7.0% of 1.0 µm filtered water. Biovolumes of the bacteria were measured by epifluorescence photomicrography. Bacterial carbon and nitrogen contents were determined with a CHN analyser. During incubations, bacterial volumes doubled from 0.070 ± 0.037 µm3 (mean ± S.E.) to 0.153 ± 0.036 µm3 at early stationary phase. Bacterial C:N ratios ranged between 2.8 and 10.3, with a mean of 6.5, and were inversely correlated with cell volumes. Conversion factors for volume to carbon and nitrogen content were relatively high and variable, ranging from 0.21 to 1.61 pg C µm-3 (mean: 0.72 pg C µm-3) and from 0.05 to 0.25 pg N µm-3 (mean: 0.12 pg N µm-3). Small cells contained more C and N per unit volume than did large cells. The data suggested that biovolume to biomass conversion factors may be higher than previously thought and may be highly variable both temporally and geographically.

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