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Sinking properties of some phytoplankton shapes and the relation of form resistance to morphological diversity of plankton — an experimental study

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Aquatic Biodiversity

Part of the book series: Developments in Hydrobiology ((DIHY,volume 171))

Abstract

Form resistance (Φ) is a dimensionless number expressing how much slower or faster a particle of any form sinks in a fluid medium than the sphere of equivalent volume. Form resistance factors of PVC models of phytoplankton sinking in glycerin were measured in a large aquarium (0.6 x 0.6 x 0.95 m). For cylindrical forms, a positive relationship was found between Φand length/width ratio. Coiling decreased Φ in filamentous forms. Form resistance of Asterionella colonies increased from single cells up to 6-celled colonies than remained nearly constant. For Fragilaria crotonensis chains, no such upper limit to Φ was observed in chains of up to 20 cells (longer ones were not measured). The effect of symmetry on Φ was tested in 1–6-celled Asterionella colonies, having variable angles between the cells, and in Tetrastrum staurogeniaeforme coenobia, having different spine arrangements. In all cases, symmetric forms had considerably higher form resistance than asymmetric ones. However, for Pediastrum coenobia with symmetric/asymmetric fenestration, no difference was observed with respect to symmetry. Increasing number and length of spines on Tetrastrum coenobia substantially increased Φ. For a series of Staurastrum forms, a significant positive correlation was found between arm-length/cell-width ratio and Φ: protuberances increased form resistance. Flagellates (Rhodomonas, Gymnodinium) had Φ< 1: they sank faster than the spheres of equivalent volume. Ceratium (Φ = 1.61) proved an exception among flagellates: in most forms tested in this study (ellipsoid flagellates, Staurastrum forms with no or very short protuberances, and Cosmarium forms), Φ > 1. The highest value (Φ = 8.1) was established for a 20-celled Fragilaria crotonensis chain. Possible origin of the so-called ‘vital component’ (a factor that shows how much slower viable populations sink than morphologically similar senescent or dead ones) is discussed, as is the role of form resistance in evolution of high diversity of plankton morphologies.

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Padisák, J., Soróczki-Pintér, É., Rezner, Z. (2003). Sinking properties of some phytoplankton shapes and the relation of form resistance to morphological diversity of plankton — an experimental study. In: Martens, K. (eds) Aquatic Biodiversity. Developments in Hydrobiology, vol 171. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1084-9_18

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1084-9_18

  • Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht

  • Print ISBN: 978-94-010-3785-3

  • Online ISBN: 978-94-007-1084-9

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