4.2 Article

Relationship between primary producers and bacteria in an oligotrophic sea - the Mediterranean and biogeochemical implications

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 193, Issue -, Pages 11-18

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps193011

Keywords

bacteria; phytoplankton; bacterial growth efficiency; ocean productivity; oligotrophy; Mediterranean

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The proverbial blue colour of the Mediterranean reflects some of the most extreme oligotrophic waters in the world. Sea-surface Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS) satellite data show the relatively clear, pigment poor, surface waters of the Mediterranean with a generally increasing oligotrophy eastward, apparent even from space. Integrated over depth, however, the east and west Mediterranean show similar amounts of phytoplankton and bacterial biomass. By contrast, primary production and bacterial production are 2 to 3 times lower in the eastern Mediterranean than in the west. However, the relationship between bacterial production and primary production in the east and west are significantly different. While bacterial production is directly proportional to primary production in the east, in the west it increases as approximately the square root of primary production. This suggests that the bacteria in the west are relatively decoupled from local contemporaneous primary production. In contrast, the gradient of close to 1 in the log bacterial production versus log primary production relationship in the east suggests less temporal decoupling and, therefore, less seasonal accumulation of DOG. In addition, the constant proportionality between bacterial and primary production of 0.22, which, if all primary products are respired, gives an estimated geometric mean bacteria growth efficiency of 22 % (95 % confidence limits of 17 and 29 %) for data in the eastern Mediterranean. Our data suggest that the degree of bacteria-phytoplankton coupling has an important effect on apparent trends between bacterial and phytoplankton production in high frequency data. The combination of low primary production and bacterial dominance of secondary production in the east is also of significance as it could account for the low fisheries production, the low vertical flux of material and low biomass of benthic organisms in the region.

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