Biogeochemical cycling of urea in the aquatic systems of Pindaré and Turiaçu River basins , a pre-Amazonian floodplain

Aim: This work is aimed at extending the understanding of urea cycle in freshwater ecosystems. Its degradation rate concerning microorganisms activities was measured in the turbid waters of Pindaré and Turiaçu rivers located on the pre-Amazonian floodplain, Brazil; Methods: The Pindaré and Turiaçu aquatic systems have distinct dry and rainy periods. The investigation was developed in the middle of the rainy period, and field activities were carried out in the extensive water bodies from the middle to lower reaches. The rate of degradation in the surface waters of the two aquatic systems was determined with in situ simulation technique using 14C-labelled urea. Photosynthetic rates were determined by the radiocarbon technique simultaneously with experimental measurements of urea degradation rate; Results: Urea degradation rates (sum of carbon incorporation into particulate matter and CO2 liberation into water) were 2.0 mg urea C m–3 day–1 in the Pindaré and 17.1 mg urea C m–3 day–1 in the Turiaçu waters. Daylight values were obviously higher than those in the dark, and the urea degradation rates in Turiaçu showed much higher values than those in Pindaré. Most of the urea degradation occurred during the CO2 liberation phase. The average of chlorophyll a specific urea degradation rate was 0.13 and 0.83 mg urea C mg chl.a–1 day–1 in both river waters. The ratio of urea carbon degradation to photosynthetic carbon assimilation in both waters averaged 1.2 and 4.2%, respectively. The residence time of urea in the surface water was calculated as 2.3 to 4.5 days in the Pindaré and 0.21 to 0.50 days in the Turiaçu. Much shorter residence times were obtained in the Turiaçu due to the high degradation rate of urea; Conclusion: The correlation coefficient between the urea degradation rate and chlorophyll a or photosynthetic rate showed a statistically significant value in the Turiaçu. This indicates that in the Turiaçu system the urea degradation rate was proportional to the standing crop of phytoplankton and their photosynthetic rate. A strong relationship between the urea carbon incorporation rate and photosynthetic rate in the light bottles was observed, indicating that the carbon incorporation into the phytoplankton cells was also related to the photosynthetic rate. The present brief residence time indicates that the urea was being rapidly recycled in the euphotic zone of the investigated systems in the rainy period.

Some data are available on urea degradation for lacustrine ecosystems.In the euphotic zone of freshwaters, urea degradation is associated with the photosynthesis of phytoplankton (Mitamura and Saijo, 1986a;Mitamura et al., 2000).Several investigators have reported using 15 N-labelled urea that it plays a significant role as a nitrogen source for phytoplankton growth (Mitamura andSaijo, 1986a, 1986b;Gu et al., 1997;Presing et al., 2001;Mitamura et al., 2006).Mitamura and Saijo (1986a) suggested that urea is mainly degraded during the urea nitrogen uptake by phytoplankton, and that the urea carbon is assimilated simultaneously by phytoplankton as one of their carbon sources.

Procedure of chemical analyses
Water temperature, pH and electric conductivity were measured in the field using a boat equipped ecosystem by measuring its rate degradation in relation to the activities of microorganisms in the Turiaçu and Pindaré aquatic systems, which differ in salinity and turbidity.

Investigation area
Baixada Maranhense is an Environmental Protection Area (APA in Brazil), with an area of almost 18,000 km 2 (2° 00'-4° 00' S and 44° 20'-45° 30' W) and distinct dry and rainy seasons.This wetland area is subject to a seasonal flooding cycle with medium-scale river water level fluctuations (4-6 meters).During our investigation the Pindaré and Turiaçu aquatic systems were in the middle of the rainy period.Water levels, therefore, were consequently considered low.Field investigations were carried out of extensive water bodies located in the middle to lower reaches of the Pindaré and Turiaçu Rivers in March 1998 (Figure 1). in the dark regime.The series of transparent and dark bottles were incubated in a water tank which was placed in the field.Incubation temperature was similar to that of the sampling stations.After incubating the bottles during the period of sunlight, the biological activity was stopped by adding formaldehyde solution.The weather condition on the respective incubation days was pallid sky.The sample water in each bottle was then filtered through a 0.2 µm Nuclepore filter.The filter was put in a scintillation vial, and 10 mL of Bray scintillation fluid (Bray, 1960) was added.The radioactivity was then measured with a liquid scintillation spectrometer (Aloka LSC-651) to determine the rate of urea carbon incorporation into the particulate matter.The filtrate of each sample was poured into a separate 50 mL glass bottle with a screw cap, and a CO 2 absorption tube containing 0.5 mL of n-ethanolamine was inserted into each bottle to absorb the 14 CO 2 liberated from the water sample solution by acidification.After adding 0.5 mL of 1 M sulfuric acid solution to each filtrate, the bottles were then sealed tightly and left for four days at room temperature.After adding the scintillation fluid to n-ethanolamine containing 14 CO 2 liberated from the water sample in the bottle, the radioactivity was determined as described above.Photosynthetic rates were measured by Steemann Nielsen's radiocarbon technique (1952) simultaneously with the experimental measurements of the urea degradation rate.The water samples were poured into both light and dark bottles and inoculated with 14 C bicarbonate solution to a final concentration of 185 kBq L -1 .Thereafter, measurements of the photosynthetic rates were conducted using the same procedure as that for the urea carbon incorporation rate as described above.The concentration of total carbon dioxide in the water sample was determined with an infrared carbon dioxide analyzer (Horiba VIA-510), as described by Satake et al. (1972).

General features
There were no appreciable differences in the vertical distribution of the physico-chemical variables determined at the respective investigation stations, indicating that water column was well mixed vertically.
Water temperature ranged from 27.4 to 31.6 °C and pH exhibited a weak acidic property.Electric conductivity revealed a considerable difference with a water quality monitoring system (YSI,model 33).Measurements of transparency were taken with a Secchi disk.Electric conductivity was equated to the value at 25 °C.Water samples (approximately 0.2 m depth) were collected at the respective stations with a plastic pail.These samples were used for turbidity measurements in the laboratory using a Turbidmeter (Hach, 2100N).After filtration with a 0.2 µm membrane filter, the concentrations of six major elements (Na, K, Mg, Ca, Cl, SO 4 ) were determined with an Ion Chromatograph (Dionex, DX-120).
For the determination of biogeochemical constituents and chlorophyll a concentrations, the waters were immediately filtered through glass fiber filters (Whatman GF/F) purged of organic matter by ignition at 420 °C.Both the filters and filtrates were then frozen solid at -20 °C until chemical analyses in the laboratory.Urea concentration was determined by Newell et al. method (1967).Ammonia was determined by Sagi method (1966); nitrite after Bendschneider and Robinson (1952), nitrate after Mitamura (1997), and phosphate (DIP) after Murphy and Riley (1962).Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and nitrogen (DON) were determined with an infra-red Total Organic Carbon Analyzer (Shimadzu, TOC-5000A) and an Automatic Total Nitrogen Analyzer (Yanaco TN-301P), respectively.Chlorophyll a was determined with a fluorometer (Turner Designs, 10-AU) according to Holm-Hansen et al. (1965).Particulate organic carbon and nitrogen were determined with a CHN Corder (Yanaco, MT-5) after the samples were free of carbonate carbon using 1 M HCl solution.

Measurement of urea degradation and photosynthesis
For measuring urea degradation rates, 20 mL of water samples were taken from the surface layer in the two respective aquatic systems and, after, this volume was placed into three series of clear plastic bottles.Crystalline 14 C labeled urea (Amersham; sp act, 1.85 GBq mmol -1 ) was dissolved in sterile, deionized distilled water, and the 14 C labeled urea stock solution was then stored at -20 °C.After adding 0.5 mL of the diluted 14 C labeled urea solution (containing 1.0 nmole 12 C urea and 1.85 kBq 14 C urea) into each bottle, 0.2 mL of concentrated formaldehyde solution was immediately added to the series of control bottles.The second series of bottles was wrapped in a black sheet for determination of the urea degradation rate Pindaré, and 0.30 ± 0.08 to 0.64 ± 0.11 µM (5.5 µg C L -1 and 12.8 µg N L -1 ) in the Turiaçu.The urea concentration displayed no appreciable change among stations in either of the aquatic systems.Total nitrogenous nutrient (TNN; sum of urea, ammonia, nitrite and nitrate nitrogen) amounted to 68 ± 11 µg N L -1 , as an average value with standard deviation, in the Pindaré, and 42 ± 8 µg N L -1 in the Turiaçu.This indicates that in both aquatic systems these nitrogenous compounds were not mostly loaded from their watersheds and/or were rapidly consumed by microorganisms.The principal nitrogenous nutrients were ammonia and nitrate.An appreciable amount of urea nitrogen in the TNN was observed, ranging from 15 to 27% and 24 to 38% of TNN in both the Pindaré and Turiaçu.In freshwater lakes, urea was found to make an appreciable contribution to the nitrogenous nutrients (Satoh et al., 1980;Mitamura and Saijo, 1981).The present concentrations of urea in the waters of the Pindaré and Turiaçu systems were comparable to those reported by the above investigators in oligotrophic to eutrophic waters (Mitamura et al., 1995;Saijo et al., 1997).The urea levels in the present aquatic systems seem to constitute the source of one of the essential between the two aquatic systems, ranging from 45 ± 0.1 to 51 ± 0.1 µS cm -1 (as an average value with standard deviation) in the Turiaçu and 22 ± 3 to 28 ± 1 µS cm -1 in the Pindaré (Table 1).In the Pindaré high salinity of 144 ± 6 mg L -1 was calculated as estimated from the sum of the six major ionic elements (Na + , K + , Mg 2+ , Ca 2+ , Cl -, SO 4 2-), while in the Turiaçu salinity presented a fairly low value of 26 ± 1 mg L -1 .The major ionic constituents (Na + , K + , Mg 2+ , Ca 2+ , Cl -, SO 4 2-) in waters of the present aquatic systems showed a variation depending on the type of chemicals.
Transparency measured with a Secchi disk was 0.1 to 0.2 m in the Pindaré and 0.4 to 0.5 m in the Turiaçu.Turbidity ranged from 82 ± 5 to 107 ± 6 NTU and 19 ± 3 to 23 ± 2 NTU in the Pindaré and the Turiaçu systems, respectively.

Distribution of urea and biogeochemical components
Urea concentrations and other biogeochemical variables in the surface waters at respective stations in the Pindaré and Turiaçu aquatic systems were listed in Table 1.Urea concentrations ranged from 0.36 ± 0.17 to 0.66 ± 0.09 µM, as an average with standard deviation (average 5.9 µg C L -1 as urea carbon and 13.7 µg N L -1 as urea nitrogen) in the Table 1.Concentrations of urea and other biogeochemical parameters, and photosynthetic rates in the Pindaré and Turiaçu aquatic systems.The contributions of urea nitrogen to TNN (sum of urea, ammonia, nitrite and nitrate nitrogen) and to dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), and of urea carbon to dissolved organic carbon (DOC) are listed.Data is shown as an average value with its range in parenthesis.
The distribution of urea degradation rates at respective stations in the Pindaré and Turiaçu aquatic systems are on Figure 2. The hourly rate of urea degradation (sum of hourly rates of carbon incorporation into particulate matter and CO 2 liberation into water, originating in the urea carbon) during the incubations ranged from 0.08 to 0.13 mg urea C m -3 hr -1 in the light bottle and 0.06 to 0.08 mg urea C m -3 hr -1 in the dark one at the Pindaré stations, and from 0.68 to 1.16 mg C m -3 hr -1 and 0.42 to 0.68 mg C m -3 hr -1 in both bottles at the Turiaçu stations.The range of the daily rates of urea degradation in the surface water, estimated from the light and dark values, was 1.6 to 2.4 mg urea C m -3 day -1 (average 2.0 mg urea C m -3 day -1 ) in the Pindaré and 13.2 to 20.7 mg C m -3 day -1 (16.3 mg C m -3 day -1 ) in the Turiaçu.The rates of carbon incorporation and CO 2 liberation phases in the urea degradation ranged from 0.17 to 0.32 mg C m -3 day -1 and 1.40 to 2.12 mg C m -3 day -1 in the Pindaré, and 3.1 to 5.6 mg C m -3 day -1 and 10.1 to 17.5 mg C m -3 day -1 in the Turiaçu stations, respectively.The urea degradation rates in the Turiaçu showed much higher values than the ones in the Pindaré.
Table 2 shows the contribution of the carbon incorporation phase to the urea degradation.9 to 27% of daily urea degradation was incorporated into the particulate matter.The contributions in the Turiaçu stations were high, whereas the percentages at the Pindaré stations were low.Most of the urea degradation occurred during the phase of CO 2 liberation, especially in the Pindaré waters.In the light incubations, an appreciable contribution occurred in the carbon incorporation phase, whereas the values in the dark incubations were almost negligible; there tended to be no differences in either of the aquatic systems.These percentages in light and dark bottles were in the same range as those in Brazilian tropical lakes (Mitamura et al., 1995) and in temperate lakes, rivers and oceans (e.g., Webb and Haas, 1976;Mitamura andSaijo, 1980, 1986a), but showed high values compared with those of Irmisch (1991) in coastal areas.
nitrogenous nutrients for phytoplankton growth in the euphotic zone of both aquatic systems.
Contributions of urea carbon to DOC averaged 0.15% in the Pindaré and 0.08% in the Turiaçu waters, while the percentages of DON, on the other hand, were 3.4% and 1.5% in both waters.Mitamura and Saijo (1981) have reported that urea comprised, as an average value, 0.29% of DOC and 13.8% of DON in Lake Biwa.Mitamura and Hino (personal communication) have noted that the contributions of urea carbon or nitrogen were counted as 0.05 to 0.24% of DOC or 0.9 to 5.0% of DON, as an average percentages in each of four tropical lakes.The contributions in the present study were comparable in their values to those in tropical lakes but lower than those in Lake Biwa.Only a small amount of DOC was represented by urea.Thus, in the present aquatic systems, urea seems to furnish a rather insignificant contribution to the DOC and DON variations.
The DIP concentration in the waters was 1.9 to 5.7 µg P L -1 .Both nitrogen and phosphorus were the limiting nutrients for phytoplankton growth in the euphotic zone from the two systems as the data seem to indicate, regarding the nitrogen and phosphorus levels and their ratio compared with that of the Redfield stoichiometric ratio (Redfield, 1958).

Photosynthetic activity and urea degradation rate
Concentrations of PC and PN averaged 12 g Cm -3 and 890 mgNm -3 in the Pindaré and 5.3 g C m -3 and 640 mg Nm -3 in the Turiaçu waters, respectively.Chlorophyll a amounts were, respectively, 16 ± 2 mg chl.a m -3 and 21 ± 3 mg chl.a m -3 in the Pindaré and Turiaçu, showing a distribution similar to those of PC and PN.To compare the particulate matter characteristics between both aquatic systems, the ratio of PC concentration to turbidity or the chlorophyll a amount was calculated.The organic carbon content and phytoplankton biomass in the particulate matter of the Pindaré system was quite low, with a low ratio of PC to turbidity and a high ratio of PC to chlorophyll a.The Turiaçu system, however, with their high ratio of PC to turbidity and low ratio of PC to chlorophyll a was characterized as turbid water rich in phytoplanktonic particulate matter that might contain the fragments of macrophytes supplied by a dense macrophyte zone.
Photosynthetic rates, determined simultaneously during our urea degradation experiments, ranged

Relationship between urea degradation and phytoplankton photosynthesis
Specific urea degradation rates, using chlorophyll a as a cell parameter, were calculated to range from 0.09 to 0.15 mg urea C mg chl.a -1 day -1 at the respective stations in the Pindaré, and from 0.68 to 0.96 mg urea C mg chl.a -1 day -1 in the Turiaçu (Figure 3).The specific rates in the Turiaçu waters were approximately ten times higher than those in The urea degradation rates were obviously higher in light than in dark regimes.The ratios from dark to light values for CO 2 liberation rates revealed considerably high values, ranging from 0.62 to 0.97 in the Pindaré and 0.79 to 0.96 (as carbon ratio) in the Turiaçu, while reaching only negligible levels during the phase of carbon incorporation (Table 2).A similar tendency was reported in coastal waters by Tamminen and Irmisch (1996).

Cycling of urea in water
The residence time of urea in water, supposing a steady state, can be expressed as the time necessary to degrade an amount of urea equivalent to the environment concentration.The residence time of urea was calculated from the daily urea degradation rate and urea concentration (Table 3).The residence time in surface water was calculated to be between 2.3 and 4.5 days in the Pindaré, and 0.21 and 0.50 days in the Turiaçu.There were no appreciable differences among the respective stations in the two aquatic systems.Much shorter residence times were obtained in the Turiaçu due to the rapid degradation rate of urea.Several studies have estimated the residence time for urea using 14 C-labelled urea in freshwaters (Mitamura and Saijo, 1986a;Mitamura et al., 2000).The residence times in the current investigations were shorter than the values in freshwater lakes and reservoirs in temperate and tropical zones.
In the turbid water of the Pindaré and Turiaçu aquatic systems, urea was presumably degraded by phytoplankton.Although a small amount of urea carbon was incorporated into the phytoplankton cells, a good part of the carbon was liberated into the water as CO 2 phase during the urea degradation.In the dark regime, in particular, the incorporation phase was a negligible contribution in the urea degradation.Several studies (Carpenter et al., 1972a;Irmisch, 1991;Mitamura et al., 1994Mitamura et al., , 2000;;Tamminen and Irmisch, 1996) reported a negligible amount of carbon incorporation from degraded urea, findings that agreed with the tendency noted in the current results.The urea was better degraded in the light condition than in the the Pindaré.The chlorophyll a specific degradation rates in the Turiaçu proved to cover the same range as those reported by previous investigations in temperate and tropical lakes (Mitamura and Saijo, 1986a;Mitamura et al., 1995).
The distribution of the chlorophyll a specific urea degradation rate was somewhat similar to the pattern observed in photosynthetic activity (Figure 3).The ratio of the urea carbon degradation rate to the photosynthetic carbon assimilation rate in the Pindaré and Turiaçu systems was calculated to range, respectively, from 0.008 to 0.018 and 0.039 to 0.044 during the day.The contribution of carbon incorporation into cells (particulate matter) from urea was between 0.11 and 0.16% of the photosynthetic carbon assimilation in the Pindaré, i.e., between 0.90 and 1.18% in the Turiaçu.The current contributions of urea carbon to the carbon source of phytoplankton (particulate matter) were almost negligible.
To clarify the relationship between the urea degradation rate and the phytoplankton biomass or its photosynthetic rate, the regression equation of the urea degradation rate against the chlorophyll a amount or photosynthetic rate was calculated by linear regression analysis.The linear regression equations of the urea degradation rate (U; mg urea C m -3 day -1 ) against the chlorophyll a amount (C; mg chl.a m -3 ) were: U = -0.001C+ 2.0, R 2 = 0.01, p < 0.5 in the Pindaré, and U = 1.44 C -12.6, R 2 = 0.86, p < 0.05 in the Turiaçu.The correlation coefficient between the urea degradation rate and photosynthetic rate showed a high value at a statistically significant level (R 2 = 0.98, p < 0.001) in the Turiaçu, in contrast to a low value in the Pindaré (R 2 = 0.03, p < 0.5).as to the variations in bacterial degradation among respective stations in this aquatic system.This indicates that in the Turiaçu system an appreciable amount of urea degradation, particularly in the case of carbon incorporation into particulate matter, is associated with the photosynthesis of phytoplankton.Therefore, in the present results, the carbon incorporation into particulate matter in the urea degradation can be considered as due to the carbon uptake process into phytoplankton cells.The variation in the urea degradation rate might result in a difference in the utilizable activity of phytoplankton species and their physiological conditions, as noted by Fan et al. (2003), although such a variation must take into account the levels of the bacterial utilization for the urea degradation as described above.
Several investigators have reported that natural bacterial assemblages could utilize urea (Satoh and Hanya, 1976;Mitamura et al., 1994;Park et al., 1997;Joergensen, 2006).However, very little urea degrading activity occurs under natural conditions.This would suggest that the urea concentration in natural waters is below the critical level for bacterial utilization (Mitamura et al., 1994), or that the urease activity of bacteria is inhibited by the presence of ammonia (Magana-Plaza and Ruiz-Herrera, 1967).The degradation of urea in natural waters occurs in connection with the photosynthesis of phytoplankton, as suggested by several studies using 14 C-labelled urea (Mitamura andSaijo, 1975, 1986a;Webb and Haas, 1976;Mitamura et al., 2000).Mitamura et al. (1995) indicated that the urea in tropical lakes was degraded by phytoplankton dark one.The current findings suggest that during the day urea degrades into the two phases of carbon incorporation and CO 2 liberation, while during the night it degrades only into CO 2 liberation.In the Pindaré and Turiaçu waters, the present ratios might increase with depth upon an attenuation of light intensity.The variation in the ratio of dark to light values might be partly caused by the differences in phytoplankton species, as suggested by Webb and Haas (1976), by the physiological condition of the microorganisms, as well as by their lower levels of irradiance due to turbid waters.Although, light intensity was not determined, the turbidity and the high suspended solids concentrations were in the same range as those in Solimões river during the low water season according to previous studies by Mitamura et al. (2000) about grain size distribution of particulate matter and sediment.The irradiance, in the present aquatic systems, might be a key parameter affecting the dark to ratio in urea degradation.
Urea degradation activity bears a close relationship to the utilization of urea nitrogen by phytoplankton, as suggested by Carpenter et al. (1972b) and Mitamura and Saijo (1986a).They also reported that the urea was mainly degraded during the urea nitrogen uptake by phytoplankton, and that, simultaneously, the urea carbon was assimilated by phytoplankton as a carbon source.The principal nitrogenous compounds which sustain the standing crop of phytoplankton populations in natural waters are thought to be urea, ammonia and nitrate, as reported in several studies (McCarthy et al., 1977;Mitamura and Saijo, 1986a;Presing et al., 2001;Twomey et al., 2005;Mitamura et al., 2006).In the current investigation, variations in the relationship between the urea degradation rate and the photosynthetic rate or the chlorophyll a amount might be due to a difference in the contribution of urea nitrogen as a nitrogen source for phytoplankton growth.The strong relationship (R 2 = 0.72, p < 0.1) between the urea carbon incorporation rate and photosynthetic carbon assimilation rate was noted in light bottles from the Turiaçu, whereas a low value (R 2 = 0.25, p < 0.5) was observed in the Pindaré.This suggests that the urea degradation rate was proportional to the standing crop of phytoplankton and its photosynthetic rate, and that the degradation may have been due to the autotrophs.In the Pindaré waters, a weak relationship might be due to a difference in the contribution of urea nitrogen as a nitrogen source for phytoplankton growth, as well rather than by bacteria during both dry and rainy seasons.Webb and Haas (1976) considered that urea degradation seemed to be an exception to the general rule of competition between phytoplankton and bacteria for the utilization of dissolved organic compounds.On the other hand, Mitamura et al. (1994) pointed out that the bacterial contribution to urea degradation was recognized in polluted river waters.In the pre-Amazonian floodplain, in terms of urea degradation, the phytoplankton in both the Turiaçu and Pindaré aquatic systems seemed to compete with bacteria.However, in both turbid waters, heterotrophic bacteria attached to the surface of suspended solids may also have contributed to urea degradation at the same time as autotrophic phytoplankton.Both the current and previous results imply that the utilization of urea by phytoplankton seems to be one of the important functions in the urea degradation of natural tropical waters, although its detailed physiological pathway remains obscure.
In the waters of both aquatic systems, a short residence time for urea cycling was observed.Mitamura and Saijo (1986b) suggested that the urea regeneration rate from excretion and mineralization is equivalent to their degradation rate, and that these processes are in a state of dynamic balance.The current brief residence time indicates that the urea was rapidly recycled in the euphotic zone of the tropical aquatic ecosystems in the pre-Amazonian floodplain.
In summary, the present findings indicate that in the aquatic systems of the pre-Amazonian floodplain of Baixada Maranhense, Brazil, the degradation of urea occurred in connection with the photosynthesis of phytoplankton, and that the urea might be more readily degraded by phytoplankton rather than by the bacteria with which phytoplankton compete, though the bacterial role in urea degradation remains obscure.To fully understand urea cycling in the pre-Amazonian floodplain, the total dynamics of urea in the water system, including the shading effect by high turbidity on urea degradation activity, ought to be carefully examined.Furthermore, the phytoplankton taxa and their structure, their physiological state and specific growth rate, and the allochthonous input of urea from their watersheds, as well as the bacterial contribution to urea degradation must be incorporated into further investigations as key parameters influencing urea cycling.

Figure 2 .
Figure2.Distributions in degradation rates of urea (sum of rates in urea carbon incorporation into particulate matter and CO 2 liberation into water originating in urea carbon) at the respective stations in the Pindaré and Turiaçu waters.Open and hatched columns indicate urea carbon incorporation rates and CO 2 liberation rates, respectively.

Figure 3 .
Figure3.Distributions in urea degradation activity (specific urea degradation rate using chlorophyll a as a cell parameter), and photosynthetic activity (photosynthetic rate per unit of chlorophyll a amounts during one day) at respective stations in the Pindaré and Turiaçu waters.

Table 2 .
Contribution of urea carbon incorporation rate (C incorporation) and CO 2 liberation rate from urea (CO 2 liberation) to the urea degradation rate (Degradation) during daily, light and dark regimes, and dark to light ratio of degradation, C incorporation and CO 2 liberation in the Pindaré and Turiaçu aquatic systems.

Table 3 .
Residence times and urea concentrations in waters at respective stations in the Pindaré and Turiaçu waters.