Title of article
Plankton community and bacterial metabolism in Arctic sea ice leads during summer 2010
Author/Authors
Garcيa-Martيn، نويسنده , , E.E. and Serret، نويسنده , , Stephen P. and Leakey، نويسنده , , R.J.G.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
10
From page
152
To page
161
Abstract
Microbial plankton metabolism was examined during summer 2010 in sea ice-influenced waters of the Fram Strait, eastern Arctic Ocean. Rates of gross primary production and community respiration were tightly coupled over a wide range of values (33±3–143±6 and 20±3–126±6 mmol O2 m−2 −1, respectively) leading to a prevalence of positive net community production. The high variability in community respiration, similar to that of gross primary production, suggests that heterotrophic metabolism may exhibit a significant response to environmental change. Bacterial respiration was assessed at similar time scales to bacterial production measurements, by determining the in vivo INT reduction capacity without pre-filtering the community. Bacteria seem to play a major role in total community respiration, contributing between 5% and 61% of total community respiration, indicating that a high fraction of the organic carbon in Arctic planktonic food webs could flow through these microbes.
Keywords
Gross primary production , European Arctic , Bacterial respiration , Net community production , community respiration
Journal title
Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
Record number
2310107
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