Meng Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, Beijing Shi, China

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Publications (4)7.45 Total impact

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    Article: Isotopic turnover of a submersed macrophyte following transplant: the roles of growth and metabolism in eutrophic conditions.
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    ABSTRACT: Stable isotopic turnover with isotopic change due to growth and metabolic tissue replacement associated with a change in environmental conditions is a critical aspect of the use of stable isotope analyses as time-integrating tracers of resource-consumer interactions. However, stable isotopic turnover in plants remains poorly understood compared with those of animals, and here we used continuous flow elemental analyzer-isotopic ratio mass spectrometry (EA-IRMS) to analyse the turnover of stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes in a submersed macrophyte (Vallisneria natans) after transplantation to hypereutrophic and mesoeutrophic treatments in a field mesocosm experiment. The direction and magnitude of the isotopic shifts of V. natans were suggested to be determined by the inorganic nutrient availability and its isotopic content in the different treatments. Based on the modelling results of turnover, the contribution of growth to the isotopic turnover was as high as those observed in various aquatic ectotherms. However, the contribution of metabolism was also considerable, especially for nitrogen in the hypereutrophic treatment, which was argued to be a response, co-occurring with growth inhabitation and biochemical disorder of V. natans, to the stress induced by the eutrophication. Our results indicated that isotope turnover in a macrophyte is a feasible technique for estimating its ecophysiological conditions in the natural environment, and that it may facilitate understanding of isotopic data in field studies of food web and habitat restoration under eutrophic conditions.
    Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry 11/2011; 25(21):3267-73. · 2.79 Impact Factor
  • Article: Variation in stable isotope signatures of the submersed macrophyte Vallisneria natans collected from several shallow lakes in China
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    ABSTRACT: We examined the stable carbon and nitrogen isotope variation in the submersed macrophyte Vallisneria natans in several shallow Chinese lakes relative to physicochemical parameters of the lake water and V. natans tissue. Of the parameters examined, the δ 15N values of V. natans were correlated only with different inorganic nitrogen concentrations in the water column, suggesting that V. natans could be a sensitive bioindicator for monitoring nitrogen input into lakes. The δ 13C of V. natans varied widely and was correlated only with the inorganic carbon concentration of the water, possibly reflecting complex photosynthetic fixation and adaptations of V. natans to utilize inorganic carbon sources of different types.
    Journal of Freshwater Ecology 09/2011; 26(3):429-433. · 0.44 Impact Factor
  • Article: Ammonium, microcystins, and hypoxia of blooms in eutrophic water cause oxidative stress and C-N imbalance in submersed and floating-leaved aquatic plants in Lake Taihu, China.
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    ABSTRACT: The heavy bloom of cyanobacteria is a disastrous consequence of freshwater eutrophication, and the bloom is highly toxic due to its secondary metabolites called microcystins (MCs). The release of organic substances from dense blooms causes an increase in NH4+ and decrease in oxygen in lake water. In the present study, the dynamics of physio-biochemical responses of five aquatic macrophytes to MCs and NH4+ stresses in Meiliang Bay were evaluated. The bay is one of the most seriously eutrophized areas dominated by the toxic cyanobacteria of Lake Taihu, China. The results demonstrate that aquatic macrophytes in Meiliang Bay are subjected to successive external stresses. From January to May, they are subjected to high NH4+ stress (>0.56 mg L(-1)), whereas from June to September or during dense blooms, the macrophytes experience both MC proliferation and moderate NH4+ toxicity (>0.3 mg L(-1)). In August, high NH4+ stress occurs along with hypoxia stress, whereas from September to December, the macrophytes experience moderate NH4+ stress, causing a serious imbalance in C-N metabolism and oxidative stress. Between the two aquatic plant life forms, floating-leaved plants are more resistant to the stresses of eutrophication than are submersed plants. Elevated MCs in the water column can aggravate oxidative stress and suppress the soluble protein contents of aquatic plants. High NH4+ in the water causes severe C and N imbalance in submersed macrophytes because of considerable carbon consumption for free amino acid synthesis. The superoxide dismutase activities of submersed macrophytes are suppressed by low light penetrating the eutrophic water, which might impair the antioxidative function of the plants. The findings of this study provide mainly field evidence that reveals the physical, chemical, and biological stresses on aquatic plants in bloom-prevailed eutrophic lakes.
    Chemosphere 11/2010; 82(3):329-39. · 3.21 Impact Factor
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    Article: Physiological stress of high NH (4) (+) concentration in water column on the submersed macrophyte Vallisneria Natans L.
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    ABSTRACT: The submersed macrophyte, Vallisneria natans L., was cultured in laboratory with NH (4) (+) -enriched tap water (1 mg L(-1) NH(4)-N) for 2 months and the stressful effects of high ammonium (NH (4) (+) ) concentrations in the water column on this species was evaluated. The plant growth was severely inhibited by the NH (4) (+) supplement in the water column. The plant carbon and nitrogen metabolisms were disturbed by the NH (4) (+) supplement as indicated by the accumulation of free amino acids and the depletion of soluble carbohydrates in the plant tissues. The results suggested that high NH (4) (+) concentrations in the water column may hamper the restoration of submersed vegetation in eutrophic lakes.
    Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 11/2008; 82(3):296-9. · 1.02 Impact Factor