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CCE V: Primary production, mesozooplankton grazing, and the biological pump in the California Current Ecosystem: Variability and response to El Niño.
- Source :
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Deep-Sea Research Part I, Oceanographic Research Papers . Oct2018, Vol. 140, p52-62. 11p. - Publication Year :
- 2018
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Abstract
- Abstract Predicting marine carbon sequestration in a changing climate requires mechanistic understanding of the processes controlling sinking particle flux under different climatic conditions. The recent occurrence of a warm anomaly (2014–2015) followed by an El Niño (2015–2016) in the southern sector of the California Current System presented an opportunity to analyze changes in the biological carbon pump in response to altered climate forcing. We compare primary production, mesozooplankton grazing, and carbon export from the euphotic zone during quasi-Lagrangian experiments conducted in contrasting conditions: two cruises during warm years - one during the warm anomaly in 2014 and one toward the end of El Niño 2016 – and three cruises during El Niño-neutral years. Results showed no substantial differences in the relationships between vertical carbon export and its presumed drivers (primary production, mesozooplankton grazing) between warm and neutral years. Mesozooplankton fecal pellet enumeration and phaeopigment measurements both showed that fecal pellets were the dominant contributor to export in productive upwelling regions. In more oligotrophic regions, fluxes were dominated by amorphous marine snow with negligible pigment content. We found no evidence for a significant shift in the relationship between mesozooplankton grazing rate and chlorophyll concentration. However, mass-specific grazing rates were lower at low-to-moderate chlorophyll concentrations during warm years relative to neutral years. We also detected a significant difference in the relationship between phytoplankton primary production and photosynthetically active radiation between years: at similar irradiance and nutrient concentrations, productivity decreased during the warm events. Whether these changes resulted from species composition changes remains to be determined. Overall, our results suggest that the processes driving export remain similar during different climate conditions, but that species compositional changes or other structural changes require further attention. Highlights • Productivity, grazing, and export were measured during El Niño-neutral and warm years. • Carbon export and controlling processes were similar during both climatic conditions. • Net primary production was lower at similar light and nutrients during warm years. • When export was high, it was associated with sinking mesozooplankton fecal pellets. • When export was low, sinking particles were predominantly unrecognizable POM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *GRAZING
*ZOOPLANKTON
*PRIMARY productivity (Biology)
*CLIMATE change
EL Nino
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 09670637
- Volume :
- 140
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Deep-Sea Research Part I, Oceanographic Research Papers
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 132289171
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2018.07.012