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Basin-scale variability of phytoplankton bio-optical characteristics in relation to bloom state and community structure in the Northeast Atlantic

Basin-scale variability of phytoplankton bio-optical characteristics in relation to bloom state and community structure in the Northeast Atlantic
Basin-scale variability of phytoplankton bio-optical characteristics in relation to bloom state and community structure in the Northeast Atlantic
Phytoplankton physiological data collected throughout the Iceland Basin and Rockall Trough during the North Atlantic spring bloom from May to June 2001 are presented. Physiological parameters including the maximum photochemical quantum efficiency (Fv/Fm) and the functional absorption cross section of photosystem II (?PSII) were measured using fast repetition rate fluorometry. Information on the taxonomic and pigment characteristics of the phytoplankton populations was also collected, with pigment data being used to reconstruct absorption spectra. Significant changes in the physiological properties of PSII were found to be associated with the progression of the spring bloom from diatom to flagellate domination. Changes in both community composition and physiology were in turn correlated with environmental parameters. Lower Fv/Fm, higher ?PSII and corresponding decreases in cell size were associated with the observed decrease of nutrients that accompanied increasing stratification. Differences in ?PSII were primarily associated with the changing pigment composition of the phytoplankton populations, with the largest changes appearing to be governed by the amount of absorption by photosynthetic carotenoids. The physiological state of PSII was thus found to be an indicator of bloom status and community structure in this productive temperate region principally as a result of taxon specific variability.
phytoplankton, fluorescence, photosynthesis, pigments, spring bloom, fast repetition rate fluorometry, northeast atlantic ocean
401-419
Moore, C.M.
7ec80b7b-bedc-4dd5-8924-0f5d01927b12
Lucas, M.I.
1d860b0b-ec20-428d-afaa-0f5ca576e369
Sanders, R.
02c163c1-8f5e-49ad-857c-d28f7da66c65
Davidson, R.
9f684474-a989-4d8c-988c-a42e3d19db25
Moore, C.M.
7ec80b7b-bedc-4dd5-8924-0f5d01927b12
Lucas, M.I.
1d860b0b-ec20-428d-afaa-0f5ca576e369
Sanders, R.
02c163c1-8f5e-49ad-857c-d28f7da66c65
Davidson, R.
9f684474-a989-4d8c-988c-a42e3d19db25

Moore, C.M., Lucas, M.I., Sanders, R. and Davidson, R. (2005) Basin-scale variability of phytoplankton bio-optical characteristics in relation to bloom state and community structure in the Northeast Atlantic. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 52 (3), 401-419. (doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2004.09.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Phytoplankton physiological data collected throughout the Iceland Basin and Rockall Trough during the North Atlantic spring bloom from May to June 2001 are presented. Physiological parameters including the maximum photochemical quantum efficiency (Fv/Fm) and the functional absorption cross section of photosystem II (?PSII) were measured using fast repetition rate fluorometry. Information on the taxonomic and pigment characteristics of the phytoplankton populations was also collected, with pigment data being used to reconstruct absorption spectra. Significant changes in the physiological properties of PSII were found to be associated with the progression of the spring bloom from diatom to flagellate domination. Changes in both community composition and physiology were in turn correlated with environmental parameters. Lower Fv/Fm, higher ?PSII and corresponding decreases in cell size were associated with the observed decrease of nutrients that accompanied increasing stratification. Differences in ?PSII were primarily associated with the changing pigment composition of the phytoplankton populations, with the largest changes appearing to be governed by the amount of absorption by photosynthetic carotenoids. The physiological state of PSII was thus found to be an indicator of bloom status and community structure in this productive temperate region principally as a result of taxon specific variability.

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More information

Published date: 2005
Keywords: phytoplankton, fluorescence, photosynthesis, pigments, spring bloom, fast repetition rate fluorometry, northeast atlantic ocean

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 21064
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/21064
PURE UUID: 5c27b7da-e3ae-449b-9eb0-f633716c9ffc
ORCID for C.M. Moore: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9541-6046

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 09 Mar 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:10

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Contributors

Author: C.M. Moore ORCID iD
Author: M.I. Lucas
Author: R. Sanders
Author: R. Davidson

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