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Article
Inorganic carbon requirements of natural populations and laboratory cultures of some Chesapeake Bay phytoplankton
The rates of photosynthetic carbon fixation for some natural populations of Chesapeake Bay phytoplankton and for unialgal cultures of species isolated from those populations follow hyperbolic saturation kineti...
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Article
Some limitations of thein vivo fluorescence technique
Thein vivo chlorophylla fluorescence technique for phytoplankton depends on the effective absorption and fluorescence quantum yield of chlorophylla. The range of variation in the ratio ofin vivo fluorescence: ext...
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Article
Growth and dissipation of phytoplankton in Chesapeake Bay. II. A statistical analysis of phytoplankton standing crops in the Rhode and West Rivers and an adjacent section of the Chesapeake Bay
It is possible to make statistically significant comparative measurements of similar sections of subestuaries under conditions where the large natural variations would mask all but drastic changes in the syste...
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Article
Significance of nanoplankton in the Chesapeake Bay estuary and problems associated with the measurement of nanoplankton productivity
Over a 2-year program of monthly cruises covering the entire Chesapeake Bay (USA), the phytoplankters which passed 35 μm mesh were responsible for 89.6% of the phytoplankton productivity. On a single summer cr...
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Article
Growth and dissipation of phytoplankton in Chesapeake Bay. I. Response to a large pulse of rainfall
Approximately 90 Km2 of Chesapeake Bay contiguous with the Severn, South, Rhode and West Rivers were surveyed by in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence and captured samples following a large pulse of rainfall in summer...