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Increasing importance of small phytoplankton in a warmer ocean

Authors :
William K. W. Li
Alejandra Calvo-Díaz
Xosé Anxelu G. Morán
Ángel López-Urrutia
Source :
Global Change Biology, e-IEO. Repositorio Institucional Digital de Acceso Abierto del Instituto Español de Oceanografía, instname
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Centro Oceanográfico de Gijón, 2010.

Abstract

The macroecological relationships among marine phytoplankton total cell density, community size structure and temperature have lacked a theoretical explanation. The tiniest members of this planktonic group comprise cyanobacteria and eukaryotic algae smaller than 2 μm in diameter, collectively known as picophytoplankton. We combine here two ecological rules, the temperature-size relationship with the allometric size-scaling of population abundance to explain a remarkably consistent pattern of increasing picophytoplankton biomass with temperature over the ―0.6 to 22 °C range in a merged dataset obtained in the eastern and western temperate North Atlantic Ocean across a diverse range of environmental conditions. Our results show that temperature alone was able to explain 73% of the variance in the relative contribution of small cells to total phytoplankton biomass regardless of differences in trophic status or inorganic nutrient loading. Our analysis predicts a gradual shift toward smaller primary producers in a warmer ocean. Because the fate of photosynthesized organic carbon largely depends on phytoplankton size, we anticipate future alterations in the functioning of oceanic ecosystems.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Global Change Biology, e-IEO. Repositorio Institucional Digital de Acceso Abierto del Instituto Español de Oceanografía, instname
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....46a21ca34ee5c022cb4a4b9005a4d026