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Spring bloom sedimentation in a subarctic ecosystem
Authors:Anya Waite  Paul K Bienfang  Paul J Harrison
Institution:1. Department of Oceanography, University of British Columbia, V6T 1Z4, Vancouver, B.C., Canada
2. The Oceanic Institute, P.O. Box 25280, 96825, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
3. Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, V6T 1Z4, Vancouver, B.C., Canada
4. Department of Oceanography, University of British Columbia, V6T 1Z4, Vancouver, B.C., Canada
Abstract:Results from a 5-yr study (1985 to 1989) in Auke Bay, Alaska show that termination of the spring bloom consistently occurred at limiting nitrate concentrations. Following nutrient exhaustion, phytoplankton sinking rates increased and displayed greater temporal variability. Threshold nitrate concentrations, approximating Ks values of the species present, were found to signal initiation of increased sedimentation. For Thalassiosira aestivalis, the threshold was ~2 μmol l-1, while for Skeletonema costatum the threshold was ~1 μmol l-1, suggesting genus-specific differences in sinking-rate sensitivity to nitrate exhaustion. Overall, sinking rates of the three principal genera ranked (high to low) Thalassiosira spp.> S. costatum>Chaetoceros spp., while the nitrate sensitivities of the sinking rates of the genera ranked (high to low) Thalassiosira spp.> Chaetoceros spp.> S. costatum. Thalassiosira spp. showed the most consistent sinking rate increases following nutrient impoverishment. During a bloom dominated by T. aestivalis, a decrease of cell sinking rate with depth coincided with a decrease in short-term nutrient stress as measured by intracellular nitrate pools. In addition, no correlation was found between chain length or aggregate formation and sinking rate for this species. Though we measured only small-scale cell-cell adhesion, not larger-scale marine snow formation, this supports the notion that the sinking rates of Thalassiosira spp. were controlled primarily by cell physiology. For S. costatum, however, shorter chains sank faster. The sinking behavior of the species studied here figures prominently in their pelagic ecology and in the carbon flux of coastal ecosystems, both of which are driven by short-term variability.
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