'Phyto-convection': the role of oceanic convection in primary production

Citation
Jo. Backhaus et al., 'Phyto-convection': the role of oceanic convection in primary production, MAR ECOL-PR, 189, 1999, pp. 77-92
Citations number
57
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
MARINE ECOLOGY-PROGRESS SERIES
ISSN journal
01718630 → ACNP
Volume
189
Year of publication
1999
Pages
77 - 92
Database
ISI
SICI code
0171-8630(1999)189:<77:'TROOC>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
Typical sinking rates of marine phytoplankton cover a range extending from a few meters up to several hundred meters per day. If it were not for a pro cess which maintains plankton near the sea surface, in the euphotic layer, ii would sink to depths of thousands of meters in the deep ocean during the winter season. Consequently, plankton would not be available for the next spring bloom. In shelf seas and coastal areas, as well as in fjords, deep s inking is prohibited by the proximity of the sea bed. The mechanism which r eliably initiates a spring bloom is generally not considered in models of m arine primary production. Such models generally rely on the assumption that a very small background concentration of plankton is available to initiate a bloom. Penetrative oceanic convection in the open ocean forms the perenn ial thermocline in winter in mid and high latitudes. The thermocline is sit uated at depths of several hundred meters. On a shelf, or in a fjord, conve ction may penetrate to the seabed. thereby affecting the entire water colum n. We argue that oceanic convection in winter accounts for the availability of plankton in the euphotic layer in spring. In support of this hypothesis a coupled phytoplankton convection model was developed. In this model plan kton, i.e. resting spores and vegetative cells, is simulated by Lagrangian tracers moving within the flow predicted by the convection model. For each tracer a simple phytoplankton model predicts growth dependent on light cond itions. Plankton spores sink with a prescribed velocity of 120 m d(-1). Gro wing vegetative cells have a sinking rate of only 1 m d(-1). The model oper ates in a Vertical ocean slice covering the water column. The width of the slice is typically 1 to 3 km, and it is resolved by an isotropic grid size of 5 m. The phyto-convection model was applied to a region in the Barents S ea shelf and to a coastal fjord in the north of Norway. It was run over win ter/spring periods under realistic meteorological forcing. Tracers represen ting resting spores were initially introduced into a thin bottom layer of t he model domain, which constitutes the worst case in terms of maximum sinki ng. The water column, apart from the bottom layer, was assumed to be void o f plankton. In both cases convection eroded the initial stratification and dispersed plankton over the entire water column. The onset of a phytoplankt on bloom coinciding with the establishment of a (weak) seasonal thermocline in spring was predicted, which agrees with observations from both regions considered. The simulations support the hypothesised role of oceanic convec tion in primary production.