Annual trend patterns of phytoplankton species abundance belie homogeneous taxonomical group responses to climate in the NE Atlantic upwelling
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Bode, A. (Antonio); Estévez, M.G. (Maria Graciela); Varela-Rodríguez, M. (Manuel); Vilar, J.A. (José Antonio)Versión del editor
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2015.07.017Data
2015-08-08Tipo
articlePalabras clave
phytoplanktontime series
climate change
upwelling
diversity
Galicia
NE Atlantic
coastal
Resumo
Phytoplankton is a sentinel of marine ecosystem change. Composed by many species with different life-history strategies, it rapidly responds to environment changes. An analysis of the abundance of 54 phytoplankton species in Galicia (NW Spain) between 1989 and 2008 to determine the main components of temporal variability in relation to climate and upwelling showed that most of this variability was stochastic, as seasonality and long term trends contributed to relatively small fractions of the series. In general, trends appeared as non linear, and species clustered in 4 groups according to the trend pattern but there was no defined pattern for diatoms, dinoflagellates or other groups. While, in general, total abundance increased, no clear trend was found for 23 species, 14 species decreased, 4 species increased during the early 1990s, and only 13 species showed a general increase through the series. In contrast, series of local environmental conditions (temperature, stratification, ...
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