4.5 Article

Modeling the influence from ocean transport, mixing and grazing on phytoplankton diversity

Journal

ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
Volume 225, Issue -, Pages 19-27

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2011.11.005

Keywords

Phytoplankton diversity; Exclusion; Co-existence; Competition; Functional groups; Grazing; Phytoplankton transport

Categories

Funding

  1. Danish National Research Foundation

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Phytoplankton diversity, whether defined on the basis of functional groups or on the basis of numbers of individual species, is known to be heterogeneous throughout the global ocean. The factors regulating this diversity are generally poorly understood, although access to limiting nutrients and light is known to influence distributions for certain groups of phytoplankton. Here, we develop a simple box model of biomasses and a limiting nutrient to describe the composition of phytoplankton communities in the euphotic zone. In addition to analyzing the relative importance of nutrient availability in generating and maintaining diversity, we apply the model to quantify the potential role of zooplankton grazing and ocean transport for the coexistence of competing species and phytoplankton diversity. We analyze the sensitivity of phytoplankton biomass distributions to different types of grazing functional responses and show that preferential grazing on abundant species, for example as formulated by the Holling type III grazing function, is a key factor for maintaining species' coexistence. Mixing and large-scale advection are shown to potentially have a significant impact on the distribution of phytoplankton species and, in general, enhance phytoplankton diversity. Based on the model solutions, we argue that ocean transports of phytoplankton cells can have a significant influence on species composition and that even transports at horizontal spatial scales of up to at least 10(2) km and vertical scales of 10(2) m can be expected to be important for sustaining phytoplankton diversity. The model is applied in a multi-species simulation (n = 200) and model simulations suggest that global patterns of phytoplankton biodiversity are determined by a few dominating species within each group. This finding is shown to be in accordance with ecological observations. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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