4.7 Article

Twenty-One Years of Phytoplankton Bloom Phenology in the Barents, Norwegian, and North Seas

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.746327

Keywords

phytoplankton; bloom phenology; Barents Sea; Norwegian Sea; North Sea; remote sensing; spring algae bloom; summer algae bloom

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Phytoplankton blooms play a crucial role in marine ecosystems by providing biomass, aiding carbon sequestration, and potentially posing risks when harmful species are involved. The seasonal blooms in the Barents, Norwegian, and North seas are influenced by factors such as mixed layer depth, sea surface temperature, wind speed, and suspended particulate matter. Variability in the timing and intensity of spring and summer blooms in these regions can be attributed to unique environmental conditions and oceanographic processes.
Phytoplankton blooms provide biomass to the marine trophic web, contribute to the carbon removal from the atmosphere and can be deadly when associated with harmful species. This points to the need to understand the phenology of the blooms in the Barents, Norwegian, and North seas. We use satellite chlorophyll-a from 2000 to 2020 to assess robust climatological and the interannual trends of spring and summer blooms onset, peak day, duration and intensity. Further, we also correlate the interannual variability of the blooms with mixed layer depth (MLD), sea surface temperature (SST), wind speed and suspended particulate matter (SPM) retrieved from models and remote sensing. The climatological spring blooms start on March 10th and end on June 19th. The climatological summer blooms begin on July 13th and end on September 17th. In the Barents Sea, years of shallower mixed layer (ML) driven by both calm waters and higher freshwaters input keeps the phytoplankton in the euphotic zone, causing the spring bloom to start earlier and reach higher biomass but end sooner due to the lack of nutrients upwelling from the deep. In the Norwegian Sea, a correlation between SST and the spring blooms is found. Here, warmer waters are correlated to earlier and stronger blooms in most regions but with later and weaker blooms in the eastern Norwegian Sea. In the North Sea, years of shallower ML reduces the phytoplankton sinking below the euphotic zone and limits the SPM increase from the bed shear stress, creating an ideal environment of stratified and clear waters to develop stronger spring blooms. Last, the summer blooms onset, peak day and duration have been rapidly delaying at a rate of 1.25-day year(-1), but with inconclusive causes based on the parameters assessed in this study.

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