The sandy substrate of Lake Taharoa (west coast, North Island, New Zealand ‐ 35°50'S, 173°41'E) is covered by communities of filamentous algae that extend from the exposed beach down to 21 m depth. The algae bind the sand to form crusts and mats which may break off as discrete plates. The dominant species are the blue‐greens Microcoleus, Nostoc, Phormidium, Lyngbya, Oscillatoria, Scytonema, Stigonema, Shizothrix, Calothrix, Dichothrix, Tolypothrix, and Anabaena, with occasional high concentrations of the desmid Cylindrocystis. Nitrogenase activity, measured by acetylene reduction, showed a wide range of rates (4–150 μmol C2H4 m‐2h‐1). Estimates of annual rates of nitrogen fixation by the Taharoa communities are comparable with those for periphytic blue‐green algae‐dominated systems reported elsewhere.
Notes
Present address: Water and Soil Science Centre, Ministry of Works and Development, Private Bag, Hamilton, New Zealand.
Present address: Freshwater Section, Ecology Division, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, Box 415, Taupo, New Zealand.
Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, University of Waikato, Private Bag, Hamilton, New Zealand.