Nitrate assimilation model for corals

kimoyo

Active member
Hey Randy,

Have you seen any models for nitrate assimilation in corals? I've seen models for ammonium assimlation (Miller & Yellowlees) but nothing to explain nitrate uptake. I've read several of the papers referenced in your nitrate article but haven't seen a model yet.

I'm really curious because a local reefer has a tank with 40ppm nitrate and still has awesome growth and colors of his sps corals. But his frag tank, which he uses old bulbs in, is browned out but still growing.

I know increased levels in CO2 or alkalinity or ammonium have been shown to alleviate some of the effects on skeletogenesis by high nitrate levels. But this reefer not only has good growth but nice colors also. I guess he could be doing something good for the growth and at the same time doing something separately for good color. Maybe his lights are helping to lighten the chlorophyll pigments while something else (he has one of the biggest bioloads I've seen) is helping with coral growth.

Thanks.
 
No not the effects.

Miller & Yellowlees, put forth a model of ammonium uptake explaining how they believe ammonium is taken in by the host, transported to the zoox, and used by both.

As you know (and discussed a little in your nitrate article), studies have shown increased growth of zoox in high nitrate levels. And eventhough it seems that corals and zoox compete for the same carbon source, studies have also shown continued coral calcification in high nitrate levels under certain conditions.

But this seems to go against the idea that corals are able to limit the amount of nutrients to the zoox, eventhough they have to contain some transport mechanism to get it to them.

What I am trying to find is paper/model of this nitrate uptake.
 
This article may cover it (or not, I do not have it):

The symbiotic anthozoan: a physiological chimera between alga and animal. Furla, Paola; Allemand, Denis; Shick, J. Malcolm; Ferrier-Pages, Christine; Richier, Sophie; Plantivaux, Amandine; Merle, Pierre-Laurent; Tambutte, Sylvie. UMR 1112 INRA-UNSA, University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis, Nice, Fr. Integrative and Comparative Biology (2005), 45(4), 595-604. Publisher: Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.
Abstract

A review. The symbiotic life style involves mutual ecol., physiol., structural, and mol. adaptations between the partners. In the symbiotic assocn. between anthozoans and photosynthetic dinoflagellates (Symbiodinium spp., also called zooxanthellae), the presence of the endosymbiont in the animal cells has constrained the host in several ways. It adopts behaviors that optimize photosynthesis of the zooxanthellae. The animal partner has had to evolve the ability to absorb and conc. dissolved inorg. carbon from seawater to supply the symbiont's photosynthesis. Exposing itself to sunlight to illuminate its symbionts sufficiently also subjects the host to damaging solar UV radiation. Protection against this is provided by biochem. sunscreens, including mycosporine-like amino acids, themselves produced by the symbiont and translocated to the host. Moreover, to protect itself against oxygen produced during algal photosynthesis, the cnidarian host has developed certain antioxidant defenses that are unique among animals. Finally, living in nutrient-poor waters, the animal partner has developed several mechanisms for nitrogen assimilation and conservation such as the ability to absorb inorg. nitrogen, highly unusual for a metazoan. These facts suggest a parallel evolution of symbiotic cnidarians and plants, in which the animal host has adopted characteristics usually assocd. with phototrophic organisms.




I have seen a number of models of nitrate in other organisms, like phytoplankton, but not corals.

Modeling the interactions between ammonium and nitrate uptake in marine phytoplankton. Flynn, Kevin J.; Fasham, Michael J. R.; Hipkin, Charles R. Swansea Algal Research Unit, School of Biological Sciences, University of Wales Swansea, Singleton Park, Swansea, UK. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series B: Biological Sciences (1997), 352(1361), 1625-1645.

Abstract

An empirically based math. model is presented which can simulate the major features of the interactions between ammonium and nitrate transport and assimilation in phytoplankton. The model (ammonium-nitrate interaction model), which is configured to simulate a generic microalga rather than a specified species, is constructed on simplified biochem. bases. A major requirement for parametrization is that the N:C ratio of the algae must be known and that transport and internal pool sizes need to be expressed per unit of cell C. The model uses the size of an internal pool of an early org. product of N assimilation (glutamine) to regulate rapid responses in ammonium-nitrate interactions. The synthesis of enzymes for the redn. of nitrate through to ammonium is induced by the size of the internal nitrate pool and repressed by the size of the glutamine pool. The assimilation of intracellular ammonium (into glutamine) is considered to be a constitutive process subjected to regulation by the size of the glutamine pool. Longer term responses have been linked to the nutrient history of the cell using the N:C cell quota. N assimilation in darkness is made a function of the amt. of surplus C present and thus only occurs at low values of N:C. The model can simulate both qual. and quant. temporal shifts in the ammonium-nitrate interaction, while inclusion of a derivation of the std. quota model enables a concurrent simulation of cell growth and changes in nutrient status.

Here are some nitrate and coral referecnes:

Nitrate uptake in the scleractinian coral Stylophora pistillata. Grover, Renaud; Maguer, Jean-Francois; Allemand, Denis; Ferrier-Pages, Christine. Centre Scientifique de Monaco, Monaco, Monaco. Limnology and Oceanography (2003), 48(6), 2266-2274. Publisher: American Society of Limnology and Oceanography

Abstract

The authors assessed the uptake rates of nitrate by the scleractinian coral Stylophora pistillata by following 15N from seawater into the coral tissue. Two sets of corals were first prepd., with nitrate-enriched corals grown in 5 mmol/L NO3- and control corals grown in Ã"šÃ‚£1 mmol/L NO3-. Uptake rates at 0.3 and 3 mmol/L [15N]NO3- were then measured. Most of the % 15N enrichment occurred in the zooxanthellae fraction. Uptake rates were not significantly different between nitrate-enriched and control corals, suggesting that they were not dependent on a nitrate acclimation. These rates increased with the in situ nitrate concn. and varied from 1.2 ng/h/cm2 N to 6.1 ng/h/cm2 N in the algal fraction at 0.3 and 3 mmol/L [15N]NO3-, resp. In a second expt., two sets of corals were prepd., with ammonium-enriched corals grown in 5 mmol/L NH4+ and control corals grown in <1 mmol/L NH4+. Uptake rates at 3 mmol/L [15N]NO3- were measured. These rates were significantly lower with high NH4+ concns. in seawater. In the algal fraction, they ranged from 0.1 to 0.6 ng/h/cm2 N in NH4+-enriched corals and from 2.2 to 4.5 ng/h/cm2 N in control corals. Nitrate can therefore be considered as an important source of nitrogen for corals, at least when ammonium concns. are low in seawater.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=6739459#post6739459 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Randy Holmes-Farley
This article may cover it (or not, I do not have it):

The symbiotic anthozoan: a physiological chimera between alga and animal. Furla, Paola; Allemand, Denis; Shick, J. Malcolm; Ferrier-Pages, Christine; Richier, Sophie; Plantivaux, Amandine; Merle, Pierre-Laurent; Tambutte, Sylvie. UMR 1112 INRA-UNSA, University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis, Nice, Fr. Integrative and Comparative Biology (2005), 45(4), 595-604. Publisher: Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.
Abstract

A review. The symbiotic life style involves mutual ecol., physiol., structural, and mol. adaptations between the partners. In the symbiotic assocn. between anthozoans and photosynthetic dinoflagellates (Symbiodinium spp., also called zooxanthellae), the presence of the endosymbiont in the animal cells has constrained the host in several ways. It adopts behaviors that optimize photosynthesis of the zooxanthellae. The animal partner has had to evolve the ability to absorb and conc. dissolved inorg. carbon from seawater to supply the symbiont's photosynthesis. Exposing itself to sunlight to illuminate its symbionts sufficiently also subjects the host to damaging solar UV radiation. Protection against this is provided by biochem. sunscreens, including mycosporine-like amino acids, themselves produced by the symbiont and translocated to the host. Moreover, to protect itself against oxygen produced during algal photosynthesis, the cnidarian host has developed certain antioxidant defenses that are unique among animals. Finally, living in nutrient-poor waters, the animal partner has developed several mechanisms for nitrogen assimilation and conservation such as the ability to absorb inorg. nitrogen, highly unusual for a metazoan. These facts suggest a parallel evolution of symbiotic cnidarians and plants, in which the animal host has adopted characteristics usually assocd. with phototrophic organisms.

Wow, this could be it. I'll try to get it and let you know. My local club is having a discussion about it here, Manhattan Reefs, if you would like to join. Thanks so much.
 
Randy,

We found the paper but,

"As for phytoplankton, the uptake of nitrate should be via a carrier transport system located in the host tissue. Such system represents an additional adaptive trait, but it has not yet been investigated in corals."

He doesn't explain it. Thanks anyway, it was an interesting read, he does talk about carbon uptake.
 
A comment like that in a 2005 literature review probably says that data are not available anywhere, but if you find anything interesting, let us know. :)
 
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