Lee 1999 Limnol Oceanogr
Lee RW, Kraus DW, Doeller JE (1999) Oxidation of sulfide by Spartina alterniflora roots. Limnol. Oceanogr. 44: 1155-1159. |
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Lee RW, Kraus DW, Doeller JE (1999) Limnology & Oceanography
Abstract: Root tips from the marsh grass Spartina alterniflora, collected from areas of high and low pore-water sulfide, exhibited a substantial capacity to catalyze sulfide oxidation, as determined by closed-chamber respirometry. A large proportion of this catalysis was apparently nonenzymatic and was higher in roots of plants from the high-sulfide versus the low-sulfide site. Activity exhibiting characteristics of enzymatic sulfide oxidation was significantly higher in plants from the low-sulfide site. Results from elemental analysis of root tissue were consistent with the theory that metals play a role in nonenzymatic catalysis. These results indicate that estuarine plants may detoxify environmental sulfide via sulfide oxidation.
Labels:
Organism: Plant
Regulation: Respiration; OXPHOS; ETS Capacity, Flux Control; Additivity; Threshold; Excess Capacity
HRR: Oxygraph-2k