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Mesoscale variablility in bacterial activity in the Northeast Pacific Ocean off Oregon, USA

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Title Mesoscale variablility in bacterial activity in the Northeast Pacific Ocean off Oregon, USA
Names Sherr, Evelyn (creator)
Sherr, Barry F. (creator)
Cowles, Timothy J. (creator)
Date Issued 2001-08-10 (iso8601)
Note Article appears in Aquatic Microbial Ecology and is copyrighted by Inter Research
Abstract Variation in bacterial abundance and activity was assessed by sampling the upper 35 to
80 m of the water column during 2 to 5 d periods at 3 sites: eutrophic-mesotrophic midshelf,
mesotrophic-oligotrophic slope, and oligotrophic gyre edge, off the Oregon coast in late summer
1997 and 1998. Bacterial abundances varied 10-fold, from 0.2 to 2.3 10⁶ cells ml¯¹, and leucine incorporation
rates varied 160-fold, from 1.5 to 240 pM h¯¹. During the strong El Niño event in 1997, bacterial
abundances were similar at all 3 sites, but midshelf ³H-leucine incorporation rates were ~6-fold
higher than rates at the slope and gyre sites. In 1998, after relaxation of the El Niño, bacterial abundances
were lower, and average ³H-leucine incorporation rates were only 2.5 times higher at the midshelf
site than at the slope and gyre sites. There was a close correlation between estimates of bacterial
cell production rate based on ³H-leucine and on ³H-thymidine incorporation rates for the midshelf
and slope sites, but no relation between the 2 estimates for the gyre site. During both years, bacterial
abundance varied inversely with depth, salinity, and macronutrients and positively with temperature.
Bacterial activity varied positively with chlorophyll concentration, temperature, and bacterial biomass.
Rates of bacterial ³H-leucine incorporation were most strongly related to chlorophyll concentrations
at the midshelf site and less related at sites farther offshore. There was no significant relation
of bacterial parameters with the concentration of dissolved organic carbon. Our results showed
dynamic mesoscale variability, on scales of 10s of meters to 10s of kilometers, and on scales of hours
to days in rates of bacterial activity, which was positively related to phytoplankton concentration as a
proxy for trophic state of the water mass. We also found inter-annual differences in distribution of
bacterial abundance and activity in this region, which appeared to be related to climatic variability.
Genre Article
Topic Marine bacteria
Identifier Sherr, E. B. , Sherr, B. F. , and Cowles, T. J. , 1996, Temporal offset in oceanic production and respiration processes implied by seasonal changes in atmospheric oxygen: the role of heterotrophic microbes: Aquat. Microb. Ecol. v. 11, p. 91-100.

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