Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8848939 Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 2018 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
Intertidal mudflats are among the most productive ecosystems and microphytobenthic (MPB) biofilms play a key role in primary production. MPB primary production varies at short spatial and temporal scales. Accurate measurements thus require rapid non-intrusive methods like pulse amplitude modulate (PAM) fluorescence. However, the effect of granulometry and chl a concentration profile in light attenuation on irradiance and on fluorescence signal in the photic layer need to be taken into account when primary production is estimated using PAM. We propose a tool to readjust raw photosynthetic parameters (rETRmax, α, Ik) estimated from PAM measurements on the field, to avoid over- or underestimation. To develop the tool, we used models previously designed by Kühl and Jørgensen (1992), Serôdio (2004) and Forster and Kromkamp (2004) by integrating the chl a distribution profiles and sediment granulometry from pure sand to pure mud. The sensitivity of the correction to sediment granulometry and the shape of chl a profile were evaluated theoretically using a typical fluorescence data set obtained using PAM measurements. Our results confirm the importance of accounting for both the chl a profile and sediment granulometry when estimating a light attenuation coefficient. We show that, with the same chl a profile, the photosynthetic parameters are more underestimated in mud than in a sandy environment. Thus, granulometry and the chl a profile need to be systematically quantified and used to correct raw data measured in field studies using PAM before estimating photosynthetic parameters. The numerical tool is available as an e-document that is simple and easy to apply to any PAM data.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Aquatic Science
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