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Coupling between phytoplankton growth and microzooplankton grazing in dilution experiments: potential artefacts

Authors :
Baptiste Mourre
Andrés Gutiérrez-Rodríguez
Edward A. Laws
Mikel Latasa
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Inter-Research Science Center, 2009.

Abstract

9 pages, 6 figures, 1 tables, 2 appendices<br />Phytoplankton distribution is relatively constant in large areas of the surface ocean. In order to maintain this apparent stability, phytoplankton production and losses have to be balanced. Indeed, growth (μo) and grazing (g) rates obtained simultaneously with the dilution technique are often tightly coupled. One problem with this approach is that growth and grazing are not independent in the ecological model on which the method is based (net growth rate = μo – g). We evaluated to which extent this methodological artefact may influence the correlation between μo and g estimated using the dilution technique. Following a Monte-Carlo approach, we show that the methodological correlation can be substantial depending on: (1) the % error in the measurement of the state variable ND (e.g. chlorophyll a) and (2) the range (± SD) of the μo and g considered. As long as the error of ND is small (< 10%), the measured correlation between growth and grazing closely reflects a true ecological relationship. For large errors, the dilution technique can yield a substantial correlation between both variables, regardless of their ecological relation. The influence of this methodological correlation decreases as the range of growth and grazing rate values increases. We developed a procedure to evaluate the ecological versus the methodological nature of the correlation observed between μo and g. The application of this procedure to a data set obtained from a coastal site revealed that the high correlation observed (rS = 0.881, p < 0.0001) reflected a true ecological relationship<br />This work was supported by the research project Eflubio (REN2002-04151-C02-01), funded by the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science. Financial support was provided by a PhD fellowship from the Spanish goverment to A.G.R. Different projects sustaining the Blanes Bay Microbial Observatory provided sampling facilities

Details

ISSN :
16161599 and 01718630
Volume :
383
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6278d6c1cd68d621616995d4f36984d4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3354/meps08005