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1.
Bioresour Technol ; 95(2): 159-67, 2004 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15246440

ABSTRACT

The concentrations and the seasonal changes of heavy metals and organic carbon in the sediments underlying a Zostera marina L. bed were measured monthly during one year, in two Mediterranean lagoons: Thau (France) and Venice (Italy). While at Thau sediments showed Cu (18.7+/-3.9 microg g-1) and Pb (13.8+/-3.8 microg g-1) average concentrations twofold higher than at Venice (Cu: 8.4+/-4.8 microg g-1; Pb: 6.1+/-0.70 microg g-1), the Italian site exhibited average concentrations of Fe (13383+/-955 microg g-1 versus 6098+/-1089 microg g-1 at Thau), Mn (339+/-12 microg g-1 versus 190+/-23 microg g-1 at Thau), Zn (61.6+/-12.7 microgg -1 versus 36.1+/-7.4 microg g-1 at Thau), Cr (47.3+/-7.3 microg g-1 versus 21.8+/-8.0 microg g-1 at Thau) and Ni (12.7+/-1.7 microg g-1 versus 8.9+/-3.1 microg g-1 at Thau) approximately 1.5-2 times as high as the French site. The organic carbon concentration was systematically higher at Thau (1.0+/-0.3) than at Venice (0.7+/-0.2). A significant seasonal fluctuation was found for Zn, Cu, Ni, Cr in both lagoons while no significant variations were recorded for Pb at Venice and for Cd at Thau. Some of those changes appeared to be significantly correlated with the biomass of Zostera at Thau and the concentration of organic carbon at Venice.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring/statistics & numerical data , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Metals, Heavy/analysis , Seasons , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Biomass , Carbon/analysis , Mediterranean Sea , Principal Component Analysis , Spectrophotometry, Atomic , Zosteraceae/growth & development
2.
Bioresour Technol ; 82(1): 27-31, 2002 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11858205

ABSTRACT

The growth of juvenile populations of Ulva rigida C. Agardh was measured by means of immersion in in situ cages against environmental parameters (temperature, incident light, salinity, dissolved inorganic nitrogen and dissolved reactive phosphorus) in four different eutrophicated southern sites: Channel of the Thau lagoon (France), Lido, Sacca Sessola and Fusina stations (Venice lagoon, Italy). The growth curves as a function of temperature showed that, in all cases, the maximal temperature for Ulva growth was 17 degrees C (limitation in growth below 7 degrees C and above around 25 degrees C). The growth analysis of these four sites showed seasonal differences. In the least eutrophicated and calmest Lido station, grazing and dissolved reactive phosphorus (seven times lower at Lido than at Thau) played a key role. At Thau and Fusina, which are eutrophicated and turbid environments, the incident light had a strong impact on growth. Sacca Sessola, with an intermediate position between the above two mentioned situations, showed the highest growth rate. The values and relative growth rate (RGR) curves of the Mediterranean and open-sea northern sites are discussed. In particular, the temperature defines the type of growth curve (unimodal or bimodal) and the incident light is responsible for the low Mediterranean RGR values (<10% day(-1)).


Subject(s)
Chlorophyta/growth & development , Eutrophication/physiology , Nitrogen/metabolism , Phosphorus/metabolism , Chlorophyta/physiology , Light , Mediterranean Sea , Seasons , Temperature
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