chlorophyll-b and chlorophyll-c

chlorophyll-b has been researched along with chlorophyll-c* in 5 studies

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for chlorophyll-b and chlorophyll-c

ArticleYear
Sewage contamination under water scarcity effects on stream biota: biofilm, grazers, and their interaction.
    Environmental science and pollution research international, 2019, Volume: 26, Issue:26

    One of the most common anthropogenic impacts on river ecosystems is the effluent discharge from wastewater treatment plants. The effects of this contamination on stream biota may be intensified in Mediterranean climate regions, which comprise a drought period that leads to flow reduction, and ultimately to stagnant pools. To assess individual and combined effects of flow stagnation and sewage contamination, biofilm and gastropod grazers were used in a 5-week experiment with artificial channels to test two flow velocity treatments (stagnant flow/basal flow) and two levels of organic contamination using artificial sewage (no sewage input/sewage input). Stressors' effects were determined on biofilm total biomass and chlorophyll (Chl) content, on oxygen consumption and growth rate of the grazers (Theodoxus fluviatilis), and on the interaction grazer-biofilm given by grazer's feeding activity (i.e., biofilm consumption rate). The single effect of sewage induced an increase in biofilm biomass and Chl-a content, simultaneously increasing both grazers' oxygen consumption and their feeding activity. Diatoms showed a higher sensitivity to flow stagnation, resulting in a lower content of Chl-c. Combined stressors interacted antagonistically for biofilm total biomass, Chl-b contents, and grazers's feeding rate. The effect of sewage increasing biofilm biomass and grazing activity was reduced by the presence of flow stagnation (antagonist factor). Our findings suggest that sewage contamination has a direct effect on the functional response of primary producers and an indirect effect on primary consumers, and this effect is influenced by water flow stagnation.

    Topics: Biofilms; Biomass; Biota; Chlorophyll; Conservation of Water Resources; Diatoms; Ecosystem; Rhodophyta; Rivers; Sewage; Waste Disposal Facilities; Water Pollutants; Water Supply

2019
Competition for spectral irradiance between epilimnetic optically active dissolved and suspended matter and phytoplankton in the metalimnion. Consequences for limnology and chemistry.
    Photochemical & photobiological sciences : Official journal of the European Photochemistry Association and the European Society for Photobiology, 2011, Volume: 10, Issue:6

    In deep lakes, water column stratification isolates the surface water from the deeper bottom layers, creating a three dimensional differentiation of the chemical, physical, biological and optical characteristics of the waters. Chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) and total suspended solids (TSS) play an important role in the attenuation of ultraviolet and photosynthetically active radiation. In the present analysis of spectral irradiance, we show that the wavelength composition of the metalimnetic visible irradiance was influenced by epilimnetic spatial distribution of CDOM. We found a low occurrence of blue-green photons in the metalimnion where epilimnetic concentrations of CDOM are high. In this field study, the spatial variation of the spectral irradiance in the metalimnion correlates with the observed metalimnetic concentrations of chlorophyll a as well as chlorophyll a : chlorophyll b/c ratios. Dissolved oxygen, pH, and nutrients trends suggest that chlorophyll a concentrations were representative of the phytoplankton biomass and primary production. Thus, metalimnetic changes of spectral irradiance may have a direct impact on primary production and an indirect effect on the spatial trends of pH, dissolved oxygen, and inorganic nutrients in the metalimnion.

    Topics: Biomass; Chlorophyll; Chlorophyll A; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Oxygen; Phytoplankton; Seasons; Ultraviolet Rays; Water

2011
The evolutionary inheritance of elemental stoichiometry in marine phytoplankton.
    Nature, 2003, Sep-18, Volume: 425, Issue:6955

    Phytoplankton is a nineteenth century ecological construct for a biologically diverse group of pelagic photoautotrophs that share common metabolic functions but not evolutionary histories. In contrast to terrestrial plants, a major schism occurred in the evolution of the eukaryotic phytoplankton that gave rise to two major plastid superfamilies. The green superfamily appropriated chlorophyll b, whereas the red superfamily uses chlorophyll c as an accessory photosynthetic pigment. Fossil evidence suggests that the green superfamily dominated Palaeozoic oceans. However, after the end-Permian extinction, members of the red superfamily rose to ecological prominence. The processes responsible for this shift are obscure. Here we present an analysis of major nutrients and trace elements in 15 species of marine phytoplankton from the two superfamilies. Our results indicate that there are systematic phylogenetic differences in the two plastid types where macronutrient (carbon:nitrogen:phosphorus) stoichiometries primarily reflect ancestral pre-symbiotic host cell phenotypes, but trace element composition reflects differences in the acquired plastids. The compositional differences between the two plastid superfamilies suggest that changes in ocean redox state strongly influenced the evolution and selection of eukaryotic phytoplankton since the Proterozoic era.

    Topics: Biological Evolution; Chlorophyll; Eukaryotic Cells; Genome, Plant; Oceans and Seas; Oxidation-Reduction; Photosynthesis; Phylogeny; Phytoplankton; Plastids; Symbiosis; Time Factors; Trace Elements

2003
A potential role of chlorophylls b and c in assembly of light-harvesting complexes.
    FEBS letters, 2001, Jan-26, Volume: 489, Issue:1

    Chlorophyll (Chl)-containing light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) in chloroplasts of plant and algal cells usually include an oxidized Chl (Chl b or c) in addition to Chl a. Oxidation of peripheral groups on the tetrapyrrole structure increases the Lewis acid strength of the central Mg atom. We propose that the resulting stronger coordination bonds between oxidized Chls and ligands in LHC apoproteins (LHCPs) stabilize the initial intermediates and thus promote assembly of LHCs within the chloroplast envelope.

    Topics: Acids; Algal Proteins; Amino Acid Motifs; Animals; Biological Transport; Chlamydomonas; Chlorophyll; Chlorophyll Binding Proteins; Chloroplasts; Magnesium; Plant Proteins

2001
Organization of the pigment molecules in the chlorophyll a/b/c containing alga Mantoniella squamata (Prasinophyceae) studied by means of absorption, circular and linear dichroism spectroscopy.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 2000, Apr-21, Volume: 1457, Issue:3

    In order to obtain information on the organization of the pigment molecules in chlorophyll (Chl) a/b/c-containing organisms, we have carried out circular dichroism (CD), linear dichroism (LD) and absorption spectroscopic measurements on intact cells, isolated thylakoids and purified light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) of the prasinophycean alga Mantoniella squamata. The CD spectra of the intact cells and isolated thylakoids were predominated by the excitonic bands of the Chl a/b/c LHC. However, some anomalous bands indicated the existence of chiral macrodomains, which could be correlated with the multilayered membrane system in the intact cells. In the red, the thylakoid membranes and the LHC exhibited a well-discernible CD band originating from Chl c, but otherwise the CD spectra were similar to that of non-aggregated LHC II, the main Chl a/b LHC in higher plants. In the Soret region, however, an unusually intense (+) 441 nm band was observed, which was accompanied by negative bands between 465 and 510 nm. It is proposed that these bands originate from intense excitonic interactions between Chl a and carotenoid molecules. LD measurements revealed that the Q(Y) dipoles of Chl a in Mantoniella thylakoids are preferentially oriented in the plane of the membrane, with orientation angles tilting out more at shorter than at longer wavelengths (9 degrees at 677 nm, 20 degrees at 670 nm and 26 degrees at 662 nm); the Q(Y) dipole of Chl c was found to be oriented at 29 degrees with respect to the membrane plane. These data and the LD spectrum of the LHC, apart from the presence of Chl c, suggest an orientation pattern of dipoles similar to those of higher plant thylakoids and LHC II. However, the tendency of the Q(Y) dipoles of Chl b to lie preferentially in the plane of the membrane (23 degrees at 653 nm and 30 degrees at 646 nm) is markedly different from the orientation pattern in higher plant membranes and LHC II. Hence, our CD and LD data show that the molecular organization of the Chl a/b/c LHC, despite evident similarities, differs significantly from that of LHC II.

    Topics: Bacterial Proteins; Chlorophyll; Chlorophyll A; Circular Dichroism; Eukaryota; Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes; Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins; Pigments, Biological; Spectrum Analysis; Thylakoids

2000