The evolution and termination of an iron-induced mesoscale bloom in the northeast subarctic Pacific
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 04:04authored byPhilip BoydPhilip Boyd, Robert StrzepekRobert Strzepek, Takeda, S, Jackson, G, Wong, CS, McKay, RM, Law, C, Kiyosawa, H, Saito, H, Sherry, N, Johnson, K, Gower, J, Ramaiah, N
We initiated and mapped a diatom bloom in the northeast subarctic Pacific by concurrently adding dissolved iron and the tracer sulfur hexafluoride to a mesoscale patch of high-nitrate, low-chlorophyll waters. The bloom was dominated by pennate diatoms and was monitored for 25 d, which was sufficiently long to observe the evolution and termination of the bloom and most of the decline phase. Fast repetition–rate fluorometry indicated that the diatoms were iron-replete until day 12, followed by a 4–5-d transition to iron limitation. This transition period was characterized by relatively high rates of algal growth and nutrient uptake, which pointed to diatoms using intracellularly stored iron. By days 16–17, the bloom was probably limited simultaneously by both iron and silicic acid supply, because low silicic acid concentrations were evident. Modeling simulations, using data from our study, provided an estimate of the critical threshold for algal aggregation. Observed diatom abundances during the bloom exceeded this threshold between days 13 and 17. Mass sedimentation of diatoms and diatom aggregates was recorded in surface-tethered free-drifting sediment traps at 50 m in depth on day 21. Although the termination of the bloom was probably controlled by the availability of both iron and silicic acid, we cannot rule out the role of algal aggregation. The bloom decline was likely triggered by the onset of mass sedimentation. During our study, evidence of both diatom species succession and species-specific aggregation point to important links between algal nutrient stress and the initiation of algal aggregation.
History
Publication title
Limnology and Oceanography
Volume
50
Issue
6
Pagination
1872-1886
ISSN
0024-3590
Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
Publisher
Amer Soc Limnology Oceanography
Place of publication
5400 Bosque Blvd, Ste 680, Waco, USA, Tx, 76710-4446
Rights statement
Copyright 2005, by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc.
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Oceanic processes (excl. in the Antarctic and Southern Ocean)