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Simulated bioavailability of phosphorus from aquatic macrophytes and phytoplankton by aqueous suspension and incubation with alkaline phosphatase.

Bioavailability of phosphorus (P) in biomass of aquatic macrophytes and phytoplankton and its possible relationship with eutrophication were explored by evaluation of forms and quantities of P in aqueous extracts of dried macrophytes. Specifically, effects of hydrolysis of organically-bound P by the enzyme alkaline phosphatase were studied by use of solution 31 P-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Laboratory suspensions and incubations with enzymes were used to simulate natural releases of P from plant debris. Three aquatic macrophytes and three phytoplankters were collected from Tai Lake, China, for use in this simulation study. The trend of hydrolysis of organic P (Po ) by alkaline phosphatase was similar for aquatic macrophytes and phytoplankton. Most monoester P (15.3% of total dissolved P) and pyrophosphate (1.8%) and polyphosphate (0.4%) and DNA (3.2%) were transformed into orthophosphate (14.3%). The major forms of monoester P were glycerophosphate (8.8%), nucleotide (2.5%), phytate (0.4%) and other monoesters P (3.6%). Proportions of Po including condensed P hydrolyzed in phytoplankton and aquatic macrophytes were different, with the percentage of 22.6% and 6.0%, respectively. Proportion of Po hydrolyzed in debris from phytoplankton was approximately four times greater than that of Po from aquatic macrophytes, and could be approximately twenty-five times greater than that of Po in sediments. Thus, release and hydrolysis of Po , derived from phytoplankton debris would be an important and fast way to provide bioavailable P to support cyanobacterial blooming in eutrophic lakes.

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