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Photobiological Effects on Ice Algae of a Rapid Whole-Fjord Loss of Snow Cover during Spring Growth in Kangerlussuaq, a West Greenland Fjord

Authors :
Sorrell, Brian K
Hawes, Ian
Stratmann, T.
Lund-Hansen, Lars Chresten
Geochemistry
Bio-, hydro-, and environmental geochemistry
Geochemistry
Bio-, hydro-, and environmental geochemistry
Source :
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, Volume 9, Issue 8, Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, Vol 9, Iss 814, p 814 (2021), Sorrell, B K, Hawes, I, Stratmann, T & Lund-Hansen, L C 2021, ' Photobiological effects on ice algae of a rapid whole-fjord loss of snow cover during spring growth in Kangerlussuaq, a west Greenland fjord ', Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, vol. 9, no. 8, 814 . https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse9080814, JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 9(8), 1. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2021.

Abstract

Snow cover on sea ice is the most important factor controlling light availability for sea ice algae, but it is predicted by climate models to become more variable and stochastic. Here, we document effects of a sudden, complete loss of the entire snow cover on first-year sea ice at Kangerlussuaq Fjord, West Greenland, due to a natural Föhn wind event that caused a ca. 17◦ C air temperature increase over 36 h. We applied Imaging-PAM fluorometry to examine effects of snow cover on algal distribution and photobiology and observed a rapid decrease in algal biomass associated with loss of the skeletal ice crystal layer on the underside of the ice that had supported most of the visible algae. Furthermore, the remaining algae were photobiologically stressed, as seen in a significant decrease in the dark-acclimated fluorescence yield (ΦPSII_max) from 0.55 before snow loss to 0.41 after. However, recovery in the dark suggested that non-photosynthetic quenching was successfully dissipating excess energy in the community and that there was little photodamage. An observed decrease in the photosynthetic efficiency α from 0.22 to 0.16 µmol é m−2 s−1 is therefore likely to be due to photoacclimation and the change in community composition. Centric diatoms and flagellates were the main taxa lost in the snow loss event, whereas the sea ice specialist Nitzschia frigida increased in numbers. These observations are similar to those seen in artificial snow-clearing experiments and consistent with snow clearing being a useful approach for investigating the complex interactions between snow cover, irradiance fluctuations, and ice algal performance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20771312
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e775f6e4531f473fa518e4816fc6032b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse9080814