4.6 Article

Spring Accumulation Rates in North Atlantic Phytoplankton Communities Linked to Alterations in the Balance Between Division and Loss

期刊

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.706137

关键词

phytoplankton; bloom dynamics; North Atlantic; Disturbance Recovery Hypothesis; light perturbation

资金

  1. Dutch Research Council (NWO)
  2. National Aeronautics and Space Administration North Atlantic Aerosol and Marine Ecosystems Study (NAAMES) [NNX15AF30G]
  3. EXPORTS study [80NSSC17K0568]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

For nearly a century, phytoplankton spring blooms have been largely explained by abiotic factors, but recent research shows that grazing and viral lysis are the main causes of mortality. Light conditions can affect division rates and biomass accumulation, supporting the Disturbance-Recovery Hypothesis.
For nearly a century, phytoplankton spring blooms have largely been explained in the context of abiotic factors regulating cellular division rates (e.g., mixed-layer light levels). However, the accumulation of new phytoplankton biomass represents a mismatch between phytoplankton division and mortality rates. The balance between division and loss, therefore, has important implications for marine food webs and biogeochemical cycles. A large fraction of phytoplankton mortality is due to the combination of microzooplankton grazing and viral lysis, however, broad scale simultaneous measurements of these mortality processes are scarce. We applied the modified dilution assay along a West-to-East diagonal transect in the North Atlantic during spring. Our results demonstrate positive accumulation rates with losses dominated by microzooplankton grazing. Considering the dynamic light environment phytoplankton experience in the mixed surface layer, particularly in the spring, we tested the potential for incubation light conditions to affect observed rates. Incubations acted as short-term 'light' perturbations experiments, in which deeply mixed communities are exposed to elevated light levels. These light perturbations increased phytoplankton division rates and resulted in proportional changes in phytoplankton biomass while having no significant effect on mortality rates. These results provide experimental evidence for the Disturbance-Recovery Hypothesis, supporting the tenet that biomass accumulation rates co-vary with the specific rate of change in division.

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