Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4537512 Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography 2008 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Natural phytoplankton assemblages collected in surface waters above the Kerguelen Plateau or in the open-ocean and single-species cultures of Southern Ocean diatoms were used to address the existence and effects of natural iron fertilization near the Kerguelen Islands (Southern Ocean). The phytoplankton was transferred during so-called translocation experiments into water collected at the surface over the Plateau, open-ocean surface water or water collected close to the sediment of the Plateau. These watertypes differed in iron (iron-rich deep water and iron-poor surface water) and silicic acid concentration (silicic acid-rich Plateau deep and open-ocean surface water, silicic acid-poor Plateau surface water). As a general trend in the natural phytoplankton assemblages, cell numbers, chlorophyll autofluorescence, photosynthetic efficiency of photosystem II, chlorophyll a and phytoplankton carbon concentrations increased especially after translocation into Plateau deep water. This response was most pronounced in terms of increase in carbon assimilation in the larger-sized phytoplankton (>8 μm in cell diameter), mainly diatoms. Effects of translocation on bacteria and viruses followed those of the phytoplankton. Experiments with single-species cultures of large diatoms (Fragilariopsis kerguelensis, Thalassiosira sp., Chaetoceros dichaeta), which have high iron requirements, confirmed the observations made for the natural phytoplankton assemblages.Assuming a continuous flux of deep water to the surface over the Kerguelen Plateau, the translocation experiments provide evidence that this water contains the growth-stimulating factor, most likely iron, responsible for the formation of a phytoplankton bloom as is observed over the Kerguelen Plateau.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
Authors
, , , ,