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Initiation of the spring phytoplankton increase in the Antarctic Polar Front Zone at 170°W

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Initiation of the spring phytoplankton increase in the Antarctic Polar Front Zone at 170°W
Names Landry, Michael R. (creator)
Brown, Susan L. (creator)
Selph, Karen E. (creator)
Abbott, Mark R. (creator)
Letelier, Ricardo M. (creator)
Christensen, Stephanie (creator)
Bidigare, Robert R. (creator)
Casciotti, K. (creator)
Date Issued 2001 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract During austral summer 1997, satellite imagery revealed enhanced chlorophyll associated with the Antarctic Polar Front at 170°W. Phytoplankton growth conditions during the early stages of the spring increase were investigated on the Antarctic Environment and Southern Ocean Process Study Survey I cruise using flow cytometry (FCM) and microscopy to characterize community biomass, composition and biological stratification and dilution experiments to estimate growth and grazing rates. Physical and biological measures showed a general shoaling of mixed layer depth from ~200 to <100 m from late October to early November. Plankton assemblages on the southern side of the frontal jet (~0°C waters) differed from those on the northern side (~2°C) in enhanced relative importance of larger (>20 μm) cells, greater contributions if diatoms and ciliate, and a twofold higher ratio of protistan grazers to photoautotrophs. Phytoplankton community growth rates from incubations at 10 and 23% of surface incident light showed good agreement between high-performance liquid chromatography estimated of chlorophyll a (Chl a) (0.20 d¯¹) and FCM cell-based (0.21 d¯¹) results. Fucoxanthin-based estimates for diatoms were 0.24 d¯¹. Mean estimates of microzooplankton grazing from the three phytoplankton measures were 0.16, 0.12, and 0.11 d¯¹, respectively. Heterotrophs typically consumed 40-100% of their carbon per day and this presumably grew at rates similar to phytoplankton. The low net rates of Chl a increase in shipboard bottle incubations (0.04 d¯¹) were consistent with the slow downstream accumulation of phytoplankton biomass (0.03 d¯¹) as measured with instrumented Lagrangian drifters through the month of November. Both were slightly less than the net rate estimates from SeaSoar surveys (0.05 d¯¹) because of the effects of pigment photoadaption (bleaching) during this time of increasing light level and water column stratification.
Genre Article
Identifier Landry, M. R., Brown, S. L., Selph, K. E., Abbott, M. R., Letelier, R. M. , Christensen, S., Bidigare, R. R., and Casciotti, K., 2001, Initiation of the spring phytoplankton increase in the Antarctic Polar Front Zone at 170°W: Jour. of Geophysical Research, v. 106, p. 13,903-13,915.

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