Control of tHe structure of marine phytoplAnkton cOmmunities by turbulence and nutrient supply dynamicS (CHAOS)
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10508/10310Compartir
Metadatos
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Mouriño-Carballido, B. (Beatriz); Agustí, S.; Bode, A. (Antonio); Cermeño, P.; Chouciño, P. (Paloma); da Silva, J. (José); Fernández-Castro, B. (Bieito); Gasol, J.M. (Josep María); Gilcoto, M. (Miguel); Graña, R. (Rocío); Latasa, M. (Mikel); Lubián, L. (Luis); Marañón, E. (Emilio); Morán, X.A.G. (Xosé Ánxelu Gutiérrez); Moreno-Ostos, E. (Enrique); Moreira-Coello, V. (Víctor); Otero-Ferrer, J.L. (José Luis); Ruiz-Villarreal, M. (Manuel); Scharek, R. (Renate); Vallina, S.M. (Sergio M.); Varela, M.M. (Marta María); Villamaña, M.Data
2016-07-20Tipo
conference posterPalabras clave
nutrientsturbulence
picoplankton
upwelling
stratification
Resum
In order to investigate the role of turbulence mixing on structuring marine phytoplankton communities, the CHAOS project included a multidisciplinary approach involving specifically designed field observations supported by remote sensing, database analyses, and modeling and laboratory chemostat experiments. Field observations carried out in the outer part of Ría de Vigo in summer 2013 showed that, as a result of increased mixing levels, nitrate diffusive input into the euphotic layer was approximately 4-fold higher during spring tides. This nitrate supply could contribute to explain the continuous dominance of large-sized phytoplankton during the upwelling favorable season. Simultaneous estimates of nitrate diffusive fluxes, derived from microturbulence observations, and picoplankton abundance collected in more than 100 stations, spanning widely different hydrographic regimes, showed that the contribution of eukaryotes to picoautotrophic biomass increases with nutrient supply, whereas ...
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