4.4 Article

Photosynthetic electron turnover in the tropical and subtropical Atlantic Ocean

Journal

DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART II-TOPICAL STUDIES IN OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 53, Issue 14-16, Pages 1573-1592

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr2.2006.05.014

Keywords

AMT; subtropical gyres; tropical equatorial; phytoplankton; fast repetition rate fluorometry; photosynthetic electron turnover

Categories

Funding

  1. NERC [NE/C518114/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  2. Natural Environment Research Council [NER/O/S/2001/00680, NE/C518114/1, NE/B500966/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Photosynthetic electron transport directly generates the energy required for carbon fixation and thus underlies the aerobic metabolism of aquatic systems. We determined photosynthetic electron turnover rates, ETRs, from ca. 100 FRR fluorescence water-column profiles throughout the subtropical and tropical Atlantic during six Atlantic Meridional Transect cruises (AMT 6, May June 1998, to AMT 11, September-October 2000). Each FRR fluorescence profile yielded a water-column ETR-light response from which the maximum electron turnover rate (ETRRCIImax), effective absorption (sigma(PSII)) and light saturation parameter (E-k) specific to the concentration of photosystem II reaction centres (RCIIs) were calculated. ETRRCIImax and Ek increased whilst sigma(PSII) decreased with mixed-layer depth and the daily integrated photosynthetically active photon flux when all provinces were considered together. These trends suggested that variability in maximum ETR can be partly attributed to changes in effective absorption. Independent bio-optical measurements taken during AMT 11 demonstrated that sigma(PSII) variability reflects taxonomic and physiological differences in the phytoplankton communities. ETRRCIImax and E-k, but not sigma(PSII), remained correlated with mixed-layer depth and daily integrated photosynthetically active photon flux when data from each oceanic province were considered separately, indicating a decoupling of electron turnover and carbon fixation rates within each province. Comparison of maximum ETRs with C-14-based measurements of P-max further suggests that light absorption and C fixation are coupled to differing extents for the various oligotrophic Atlantic provinces. We explore the importance of quantifying RCII concentration for determination of ETRs and interpretation of ETR-C fixation coupling. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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