Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4549590 Journal of Sea Research 2015 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•An east and west coast plankton monitoring site in Scotland are compared.•The spring diatom bloom begins earlier at the Loch Ewe site on the west coast.•A higher biomass of phytoplankton, zooplankton grazers and carnivores are observed at the Loch Ewe site on the west coast.•Comparisons with other time series suggest the plankton community are responding to large scale environmental influences.•Differences at the lower trophic levels show the need for regional criteria to assess the status of the marine ecosystem.

This study presents the first comparative description of the physics, nutrients and plankton communities at two Scottish monitoring sites between 2003 and 2012; Stonehaven on the east coast of Scotland and Loch Ewe on the west coast. This description provides baseline information about the diversity of the plankton community in Scottish waters to support assessment of the plankton community for the EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Spring time temperatures at Loch Ewe were approximately 2 °C higher and the median secchi depth was almost 1 m greater than at Stonehaven during this period. Freshwater inflow from the river Ewe may promote water column stability at Loch Ewe. These factors may account for the earlier spring bloom observed at the Loch Ewe monitoring site. The seasonality of chlorophyll ‘a’ at Loch Ewe was typical of stratified waters in temperate regions with a strong spring/autumn peak attributed to increased numbers of diatoms whilst dinoflagellates dominated during the summer. At Stonehaven highest concentrations of chlorophyll were recorded between May and June and the autumn diatom bloom was considerably less than in Loch Ewe. A higher biomass of zooplankton grazers was found at Loch Ewe than at Stonehaven. Pseudocalanus was the dominant copepod at both sites, particularly during the spring period. Zooplankton carnivores were also more abundant at Loch Ewe than at Stonehaven and were dominated by cnidarians. Considerable interannual variability was observed in cnidarian abundance and diversity at both sites. Variation in the abundance of Ceratium, Calanus finmarchicus and Calanus helgolandicus at both sites followed similar trends in other time series suggesting that the plankton communities at Stonehaven and Loch Ewe are responding to large scale environmental influences.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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