Phytoplankton ecology and biogeochemistry of the warming Antarctic sea-ice zone
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Abstract
Marine productivity along the western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) is
declining. The WAP is site of the fastest regional warming in the southern
hemisphere, and has experienced atmospheric and oceanic temperature increases
leading to increased glacial inputs and reduced winter sea-ice cover. Sea-ice is a key
link between climate and phytoplankton production, as melting sea-ice stratifies the
water column and provides a source of micronutrients to surface waters. Reductions
in ice cover have been accompanied by declining chlorophyll (chl; a proxy for
phytoplankton biomass), and a shift to smaller cell sizes in phytoplankton
communities. These reductions have implications for carbon drawdown and
production available to higher trophic levels. However, little is known about
phytoplankton shifts at the community level, as existing studies are based on satellite
records and photosynthetic pigment analyses.
To elucidate the nature of the changes within phytoplankton assemblages,
high-resolution time-series data of diatom speciation are coupled to environmental
data from five years in Ryder Bay (Adelaide Island, WAP). Long-term monitoring at
this site by the British Antarctic Survey has identified a strong relationship between
chl and water column stratification, and this study spans a wide range of physical
conditions and biological production. By comparing high- and low-chl
phytoplankton assemblages, this study investigates the mechanisms underlying
productivity changes and the manner in which these changes impact nutrient cycling,
drawdown and trophic transfer.
The results presented here are the first full season in-situ records
documenting differences in phytoplankton and diatom assemblages between highand
low-chl years. The primary difference between chl conditions is a dramatic decline in diatom abundance. This analysis indicates that the mechanism producing
low-chl seasons is less stratified surface waters, where light levels are much more
variable than in high-chl years. Overall production is reduced, and small increases
are seen in biomass of prymnesiophytes, which are better adapted to variable light.
These shifts in phytoplankton composition and size structure are consistent with a
southward propagation of observed climate change effects. Within the diatom
community, changes in seasonal succession and a decrease in species richness
occurred following low winter sea-ice. As the main component of high productivity
and that most efficiently transferred to higher trophic levels, variation in diatom
production due to environmental conditions is a mechanism to explain the observed
WAP ecosystem changes and chl decline.
Changes in phytoplankton stocks and composition also affect nutrient use,
and here the use of silicon and iron (Si and Fe, respectively, which limit productivity
in large areas of the Southern Ocean) is investigated. Seasonal Si budgets estimated
from Si isotopes indicate a 40 – 70% decline in Si use between high-chl and
intermediate-chl years, in agreement with other indices of productivity. The
consequences of reduced demand and changing supply suggest future accumulation
of Si in WAP surface waters. This should increase Si export away from the WAP
shelf, which may act as a mechanism to enhance productivity and carbon drawdown
in the wider Southern Ocean.
Sources of Fe were assessed by direct measurement and naturally occurring
radioisotopes of radium. These reveal significant inputs at the surface (due to glacial
sources) and to deep waters (from shelf/slope sediments), which dominate supply to
the surface mixed layer at different times. Iron availability and nutrient drawdown
indicate that Fe is supplied to WAP surface waters in excess of biological demand.
Projected changes to Fe sources and sinks indicate that continued warming will
increase the WAP Fe inventory. As for Si, this excess Fe may also be advected away
from the shelf, making this region a net Fe source to the Southern Ocean.
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