4.5 Article

Iron, macronutrients and diatom blooms in the Peru upwelling regime: brown and blue waters of Peru

Journal

MARINE CHEMISTRY
Volume 93, Issue 2-4, Pages 81-103

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.marchem.2004.06.011

Keywords

chlorophyll alpha; near-bottom suboxic waters; maximal photochemical efficiencies

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Surface water transects and vertical profiles for dissolved iron, macronutrients, chlorophyll a (Chl a), and hydrographic data were obtained in the Peru upwelling regime during August and September 2000. The supply of the micronutrient iron, relative to that of the macronutrients nitrate, phosphate and silicic acid, is shown to play a critical role in allowing extensive diatom blooms to develop in the Peru upwelling system. The extremely high-chlorophyll brown waters of Peru (with Chl a concentrations between 20 and 45 mug/l) result from massive diatom blooms with maximal photochemical efficiencies (F-v/F-m >0.6) occurring in the iron-rich upwelling region observed over the broad continental shelf off northern and central Peru. The source of the upwelled water in this region is the nutrient-rich subsurface countercurrent in contact with the organic-rich shelf sediments. This subsurface shelf water is suboxic and has extremely high concentrations of dissolved Fe (>50 nM) in the near-bottom waters. In marked contrast, relatively low-chlorophyll blue waters (Chl a >2 mug/l) with low concentrations of dissolved Fe (<0.1 nM) and high unutilized macronutrient concentrations are observed in the coastal upwelled waters along the southern coast of Peru and in the offshore regions of the Peru Current. Southern Peru is a region without a wide shelf to serve as a source of iron and, as a result, dissolved Fe concentrations in the near-bottom suboxic waters of this region are an order-of-magnitude lower than observed off northern and central Peru. In addition, the offshore Peru Current is a broad, Fe-limited, high-nitrate, lower than expected chlorophyll region extending hundreds of kilometers offshore into the northeast region of the South Pacific subtropical gyre and northwestward into the South Equatorial Pacific. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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