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Sediment extracts boosted Microcystis growth and phosphorus use

An illustration showing algae cultivation and research, featuring a pastoral landscape with a tractor, underwater aquatic plants, petri dishes with algae samples, laboratory flasks with green liquid, a microscopic view of algal cells and molecular structures, and scientific charts and graphs.
Research area:Environmental ScienceAquatic Ecosystems and Phytoplankton DynamicsNutrient

What the study found

Sediment extracts produced the highest growth rates in two Microcystis strains, and nutrient supply seemed to affect biomass expansion more than microcystin production. The study also found that cyanobacterial scum contained substantial nitrogen, while floating periphyton mats acted as phosphorus buffers.

Why the authors say this matters

The authors suggest that mechanical removal of periphyton mats during spring could be a more viable and cost-effective management strategy than sediment dredging for reducing harmful algal blooms in eutrophic reservoirs. The study suggests this is linked to the mats detaching and floating when microbial activity in sediments increases.

What the researchers tested

The researchers analyzed the chemical composition of cyanobacterial scum, floating periphyton mats, sediment, and agricultural soil. They then grew Microcystis strains NIER10004 and CBE51 in laboratory cultures with these nutrient sources and measured growth, phosphorus uptake, and microcystin concentrations.

What worked and what didn't

Sediment extracts promoted the greatest growth rates, with values of 0.0160 and 0.0166 OD750/d for the two strains, and the highest biomass-to-total phosphorus ratios. Phosphorus uptake showed a biphasic pattern: orthophosphate was depleted quickly in the first 10 days, then organic phosphorus was used, likely with alkaline phosphatase activity; microcystin concentrations peaked at the start of the stationary phase, but total microcystin content had a low correlation with nutrient source.

What to keep in mind

The abstract does not describe limitations beyond the experimental scope. The findings are based on laboratory cultures and nutrient-source comparisons, so the summary is limited to the conditions described in the study.

Key points

  • Cyanobacterial scum was identified as a major nitrogen reservoir.
  • Floating periphyton mats were described as significant phosphorus buffers through luxury uptake.
  • Sediment extracts produced the highest growth rates in both Microcystis strains tested.
  • Phosphorus use shifted from orthophosphate to organic phosphorus after the first 10 days.
  • Microcystin levels peaked at the onset of the stationary phase and were only weakly linked to nutrient source.

Disclosure

Research title:
Sediment extracts boosted Microcystis growth and phosphorus use
Publication date:
2026-02-24
OpenAlex record:
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AI provenance: AI provenance information is not available for this post.