Bio-optical Characteristics and the Vertical Distribution of Photosynthetic Pigments and Photosynthesis in an Artificial Cyanobacterial Mat

Microb Ecol. 2000 Aug;40(2):94-103. doi: 10.1007/s002480000061.

Abstract

Zonations of photosynthesis and photopigments in artificial cyanobacterial mats were studied with (i) oxygen and pH microsensors, (ii) fiber-optic microprobes for field radiance, scalar irradiance, and PSII fluorescence, and (iii) a light microscope equipped with a spectrometer for spectral absorbance and fluorescence measurements. Our analysis revealed the presence of several distinct 1-2 mm thick cyanobacterial layers mixed with patches of anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria. Strong attenuation of visible light confined the euphotic zone to the uppermost 3 mm of the mat, where oxygen levels of 3-4 times air saturation and a pH peak of up to pH 8.8 were observed under saturating irradiance (413 µmol photon m(-2) s(-1)). Oxygen penetration was 5 mm in light and decreased to 1 mm in darkness. Volumetric oxygen consumption in the photic and aphotic zones of illuminated mat was 5.5 and 2.9 times higher, respectively, than oxygen consumption in dark incubated mats. Scalar irradiance reached 100-150% of incident irradiance in the upper 0.5 mm of the mat due to intense scattering in the matrix of cells, exopolymers, and carbonate precipitates. In deeper mat layers scalar irradiance decreased nearly exponentially, and highest attenuation coefficients of 6-7 mm(-1) were found in cyanobacterial layers, where photosynthesis and photopigment fluorescence also peaked. Visible light was attenuated >100 times more strongly than near infrared light. Microscope spectrometry on thin sections of mats allowed detailed spectral absorbance and fluorescence measurements at defined positions relative to the mat surface. Besides strong spectral signals of cyanobacterial photopigments (Chl a and phycobiliproteins), the presence of both green and purple photosynthetic bacteria was evident from spectral signals of Bchl a and Bchl c. Microprofiles of photopigment absorbance correlated well with microdistributions of phototrophs determined in an accompanying study.