Study on the Distribution of Surface Chlorophyll-a and Subsurface Chlorophyll Maximum in the Southeastern Yellow Sea According to the Typhoon Paths and Water Masses

2020 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 353-372
Author(s):  
Pung-Guk Jang ◽  
Jung-Hoon Kang ◽  
Kyoungsoon Shin
2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 4273-4286 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Monier ◽  
R. Terrado ◽  
M. Thaler ◽  
A. Comeau ◽  
E. Medrinal ◽  
...  

Abstract. The ubiquity of heterotrophic flagellates (HFL) in marine waters has been recognized for several decades, but the phylogenetic diversity of these small (ca. 0.8–20 μm cell diameter), mostly phagotrophic protists in the upper pelagic zone of the ocean is underappreciated. Community composition of microbes, including HFL, is the result of past and current environmental selection, and different taxa may be indicative of food webs that cycle carbon and energy very differently. While all oceanic water columns can be density stratified due to the temperature and salinity characteristics of different water masses, the Arctic Ocean is particularly well stratified, with nutrients often limiting in surface waters and most photosynthetic biomass confined to a subsurface chlorophyll maximum layer, where light and nutrients are both available. This physically well-characterized system provided an opportunity to explore the community diversity of HFL from different water masses within the water column. We used high-throughput DNA sequencing techniques as a rapid means of surveying the diversity of HFL communities in the southern Beaufort Sea (Canada), targeting the surface, the subsurface chlorophyll maximum layer (SCM) and just below the SCM. In addition to identifying major clades and their distribution, we explored the micro-diversity within the globally significant but uncultivated clade of marine stramenopiles (MAST-1) to examine the possibility of niche differentiation within the stratified water column. Our results strongly suggested that HFL community composition was determined by water mass rather than geographical location across the Beaufort Sea. Future work should focus on the biogeochemical and ecological repercussions of different HFL communities in the face of climate-driven changes to the physical structure of the Arctic Ocean.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena A. Kubryakova ◽  
Arseny A. Kubryakov

Abstract. Winter vertical entrainment of deep waters determines not only the amount of nutrients in the upper layers, but also the light conditions in it, through the self-shading mechanism. In this paper, we use Bio-Argo data to demonstrate significant differences in the vertical distribution of chlorophyll-a concentration (Chl) in the Black Sea between a year with cold winter (2017) and a year with warm winter (2016). Stronger vertical entrainment of nutrient-rich waters from deeper isopycnal layers in cold 2017 caused an increase of Chl in winter up to 0.6–0.7 mg/m3 compared to a warm winter of 2016, when Chl was only 0.4–0.5 mg/m3. Further, during almost the whole year from February to October Chl in the upper 0–40 m layer of cold 2017 year was on 0.1–0.2 mg/m3 higher than in 2016. This rise of Chl in 2017 led to an increase in light attenuation due to the self-shading effect. In contrast, in warm 2016 with a lower amount of nutrients light attenuation decreased and the irradiance reached deeper isopycnals layers with a higher amount of nutrients. As a result, in warm 2016 the subsurface chlorophyll maximum deepens and the values of Chl in 40–60 m layers were significantly higher than in 2017. The maximum positive difference in this layer (0.5 mg/m3) was observed during a summer seasonal peak of irradiance due to the largest increase of light attenuation in the summer of 2017. As a result, the column-averaged yearly values of Chl in warm 2016 and cold 2017 were comparable. However, in the year with intense winter mixing upper layers are more productive, while in the year with low winter vertical mixing, subsurface chlorophyll maximum widens and reaches deeper layers. These results show that the observed long-term warming may lead to the continuous deepening of the subsurface chlorophyll maximum in the ocean.


1982 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 791-803 ◽  
Author(s):  
John J. Cullen

The relationship between chlorophyll a and phytoplankton biomass (organic carbon content) is highly variable as is the yield of in vivo fluorescence per unit chlorophyll. Thus, vertical profiles of chlorophyll or in vivo fluorescence must be interpreted with caution if their ecological significance is to be established. Although the variability of carbon-to-chlorophyll ratios and fluorescence yield is large, much of it can be anticipated, corrected for, and usefully interpreted. Vertical profiles from different regions of the sea are presented; each has a deep chlorophyll maximum, but the probable mechanisms of their formation and maintenance differ widely. Most vertical distributions of chlorophyll can be explained by the interaction between hydrography and growth, behavior, or physiological adaptation of phytoplankton with no special consideration of grazing by herbivores, even though vertical distributions of epizooplankton are not uniform. The interaction between vertical profiles of zooplankton and chlorophyll will be better understood when the relationships between chlorophyll and phytoplankton biomass in those profiles is determined.Key words: chlorophyll a, fluorescence, phytoplankton, vertical structure


1988 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. 289-301 ◽  
Author(s):  
RW Eppley ◽  
E Swift ◽  
DG Redalje ◽  
MR Landry ◽  
LW Haas

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