Title of article
Diatoms in the desert: Plankton community response to a mesoscale eddy in the subtropical North Pacific
Author/Authors
Brown، نويسنده , , Susan L. and Landry، نويسنده , , Michael R. and Selph، نويسنده , , Karen E. and Jin Yang، نويسنده , , Eun and Rii، نويسنده , , Yoshimi M. and Bidigare، نويسنده , , R.R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
13
From page
1321
To page
1333
Abstract
As part of the E-Flux project, we documented spatial variability and temporal changes in plankton community structure in a cold-core cyclonic eddy in the lee of the Hawaiian Islands. Cyclone Opal spanned 200 km in diameter, with sharply uplifted isopycnals (80–100 m relative to surrounding waters) and a strongly expressed deep chlorophyll a maximum (DCM) in its central core region of 40 km diameter. Microscopic and flow cytometric analyses of samples from across the eddy revealed dramatic transitions in phytoplankton community structure, reflecting Opalʹs well-developed physical structure. Upper mixed-layer populations in the eddy resembled those outside the eddy and were dominated by picophytoplankton. In contrast, the DCM was composed of large chain-forming diatoms dominated by Chaetoceros and Rhizosolenia spp. Diatoms attained unprecedented levels of biomass (nearly 90 μg C l−1) in the center of the eddy, accounting for 85% of photosynthetic biomass. Protozoan grazers displayed two- to three-fold higher biomass levels in the eddy center as well. We also found a distinct and persistent layer of senescent diatom cells overlying healthy populations, often separated by less than 10 m, indicating that we were sampling a bloom in a state of decline. Time-series sampling over 8 days showed a successional shift in community structure within the central diatom bloom, from the unexpected large chain-forming species to smaller forms more typical of the subtropical North Pacific. The diatom bloom of Cyclone Opal was a unique, and possibly extreme, example of biological response to physical forcing in the North Pacific subtropical gyre, and its detailed study may therefore help to improve our predictive understanding of environmental controls on plankton community structure.
Keywords
plankton , Subtropical North Pacific , community structure , Eddy , Diatoms
Journal title
Deep-sea research part II: Topical Studies in oceanography
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Deep-sea research part II: Topical Studies in oceanography
Record number
2314434
Link To Document