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Published November 2019 | Published
Journal Article Open

Phytoplankton spring bloom initiation: The impact of atmospheric forcing and light in the temperate North Atlantic Ocean

Abstract

The spring bloom dominates the annual cycle of phytoplankton abundance in large regions of the world oceans. The mechanisms that trigger blooms have been studied for decades, but are still keenly debated, due in part to a lack of data on phytoplankton stocks in winter and early spring. Now however autonomous underwater gliders can provide high-resolution sampling of the upper ocean over inter-seasonal timescales and advance our understanding of spring blooms. In this study, we analyze bio-optical and physical observations collected by gliders at the Porcupine Abyssal Plain observatory site to investigate the impact of atmospheric forcing and light conditions on phytoplankton blooms in the temperate North Atlantic. We contrast three hypotheses for the mechanism of bloom initiation: the critical depth, critical turbulence, and dilution-recoupling hypotheses. Bloom initiation at our study site corresponded to an improvement in growth conditions for phytoplankton (increasing light, decreasing mixing layer depth) and was most consistent with the critical depth hypothesis, with the proviso that mixing depth (rather than mixed layer depth) was considered. After initiation, the observed bloom developed slowly: over several months both depth-integrated inventories and surface concentrations of chlorophyll a increased only by a factor of ≈2 and ≈3 respectively. We find that periods of convective mixing and high winds in winter and spring can substantially decrease (up to an order of magnitude) light-dependent mean specific growth rate for phytoplankton and prevent the development of rapid, high-magnitude blooms.

Additional Information

© 2019 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. Under an Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). Received 10 May 2019, Revised 16 September 2019, Accepted 2 October 2019, Available online 10 October 2019. The authors would like to acknowledge glider teams at the University of East Anglia and California Institute of Technology, and the crews of the RRS Discovery, RV Celtic Explorer, and RRS James Cook for their help with the data collection and piloting the gliders. We thank John Taylor for valuable discussions on phytoplankton spring blooms. OSMOSIS was supported by NERC grants NE/I020083/1 and NE/I019905/1. Data acquisition for the project was also supported through EU FP7 Project EuroBASIN and NERC National Capability PAPSO funding. A. Rumyantseva was supported through a University of Southampton PhD studentship, A. Thompson was supported by NSF-OCE 1155676. The OSMOSIS data set is lodged with the British Oceanographic Data Centre (Damerell et al., 2018), and can be accessed at https://doi.org/10/cqc6. Conflict of interest: No conflicts of interest

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August 22, 2023
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October 18, 2023