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Turbulent supply of nutrients to phytoplankton at the New England shelf break front

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Title Turbulent supply of nutrients to phytoplankton at the New England shelf break front
Names Hales, Burke (creator)
Hebert, Dave (creator)
Marra, John (creator)
Date Issued 2009-05-13 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract We present observations from deployments of a microstructure turbulence instrument
(the Towed Microstructure and Auxiliary Sensor Instrument) aboard a pumping profiling
vehicle (the Lamont Pumping SeaSoar) towed behind a research vessel at the New
England shelf break front in August 2002. From these we determined coincident fine-scale
vertical eddy diffusivity and gradients of nitrate, phosphate, and silicate on several
transects spanning the front. We then quantified vertical turbulent nutrient fluxes through
the base of the euphotic zone (defined as the 1% light level), the base of the density
transition zone, maximum nutrient gradients (the nutriclines), and the depth of maximum
stratification (the pycnocline). Vertical eddy diffusivity estimates spanned a wide range
from near-molecular levels at the pycnocline to values exceeding 10⁻³ m² s⁻¹ at depth and
in the surface layers. Vertical nutrient fluxes were maximal at the 1% light level and
decreased by 2 orders of magnitude as they moved upward through the water column to
the depth of the pycnocline. Nutrient fluxes were enhanced shoreward of the front
because of high mixing rates and nutrient gradients at the depth of the 1% light level.
Nitrate fluxes there averaged about 6 x 10⁻⁵ mmol N m⁻² s⁻¹, sufficient to support a net
community productivity of 30 mmol C m⁻² d⁻¹. Seaward of the front, these fluxes
averaged about 1 x 10⁻⁵ mmol N m⁻² s⁻¹ and would support correspondingly lower
productivity. A small part of the upward flux appeared to support a silicifying community
of phytoplankton that consumed phosphate in proportion to nitrate at about double
the canonical Redfield stoichiometry.
Genre Article
Topic nutrient
Identifier Hales , B., D. Hebert, and J. Marra (2009), Turbulent supply of nutrients to phytoplankton at the New England shelf break front, J. Geophys. Res., 114, C05010.

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