4.6 Article

Early snowmelt and sea ice breakup enhance algal export in the Beaufort Sea

Journal

PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 190, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2020.102479

Keywords

Sediment trap; Microalgae; Ice algae; Export; Snowmelt; Sea ice breakup; Beaufort Sea

Categories

Funding

  1. Long-Term Oceanic Observatories (LTOO) project - Network of Centres of Excellence of Canada ArcticNet
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  3. Alexander Graham Bell Canada Graduate Scholarship of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  4. Fonds de recherche Nature et Technologies du Quebec

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This study investigated the impact of snow and sea ice cover on microalgal fluxes in the Beaufort Sea, finding that delayed sea ice breakup and early snowmelt in 2016 contributed to higher diatom fluxes, while delayed sea ice algae release led to lower diatom and PPC fluxes when snowmelt occurred late. The ongoing sea ice reduction due to global warming may increase PPC fluxes to the seafloor and carbon sequestration at depth in the Arctic Ocean.
Microalgal cells collected with moored sediment traps deployed during three to five annual cycles at three sites in the Beaufort Sea were identified to investigate variations in the timing, abundance and composition of microalgal fluxes in relation to snow and sea ice cover. The investigation period encompassed two extremes in snow and sea ice conditions: a delayed melt due to an ice rebound in 2013 and a premature snowmelt and sea ice breakup that led to an ice-free Beaufort Sea in 2016. Diatoms dominated the microalgal fluxes, with the pelagic centric diatoms Thalassiosira spp. and the ice-associated pennate diatoms Fragilariopsis spp. consistently collected at the three sites. The export of the ice-obligated algae Nitzschia frigida indicated the release of sea ice algae at the onset of snowmelt. Early snowmelt and sea ice breakup in 2016 contributed to an early start of ice algae release accompanied with early peaks in diatom fluxes and higher diatom and phytoplankton carbon (PPC) fluxes during spring and summer. Conversely, delayed sea ice algae release, low diatom fluxes, and low PPC fluxes were observed when snowmelt and sea ice breakup occurred late over the Mackenzie shelf break. The amount of diatoms exported at similar to 100-300 m also likely depended on a match or mismatch between algal production and zooplankton grazing. Variations in the snow and sea ice regimes at the regional scale therefore directly impact the timing and magnitude of microalgal export and its contribution to particulate organic carbon flux in the Arctic Ocean. With global warming, the ongoing sea ice reduction in the Arctic Ocean may increase PPC fluxes to the seafloor and potential carbon sequestration at depth.

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