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Biophysical Interactions Control the Size and Abundance of Large Phytoplankton Chains at the Ushant Tidal Front

Phytoplankton blooms are usually dominated by chain-forming diatom species that can alter food pathways from primary producers to predators by reducing the interactions between intermediate trophic levels. The food-web modifications are determined by the length of the chains; however, the estimation...

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Autores principales: Landeira, José M., Ferron, Bruno, Lunven, Michel, Morin, Pascal, Marié, Louis, Sourisseau, Marc
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3938756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24587384
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090507
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author Landeira, José M.
Ferron, Bruno
Lunven, Michel
Morin, Pascal
Marié, Louis
Sourisseau, Marc
author_facet Landeira, José M.
Ferron, Bruno
Lunven, Michel
Morin, Pascal
Marié, Louis
Sourisseau, Marc
author_sort Landeira, José M.
collection PubMed
description Phytoplankton blooms are usually dominated by chain-forming diatom species that can alter food pathways from primary producers to predators by reducing the interactions between intermediate trophic levels. The food-web modifications are determined by the length of the chains; however, the estimation is biased because traditional sampling strategies damage the chains and, therefore, change the phytoplankton size structure. Sedimentological studies around oceanic fronts have shown high concentrations of giant diatom mats (>1 cm in length), suggesting that the size of diatom chains is underestimated in the pelagic realm. Here, we investigate the variability in size and abundance of phytoplankton chains at the Ushant tidal front (NW France) using the Video Fluorescence Analyzer (VFA), a novel and non-invasive system. CTD and Scanfish profiling characterized a strong temperature and chlorophyll front, separating mixed coastal waters from the oceanic-stratified domain. In order to elucidate spring-neap variations in the front, vertical microstructure profiler was used to estimate the turbulence and vertical nitrate flux. Key findings were: (1) the VFA system recorded large diatom chains up to 10.7 mm in length; (2) chains were mainly distributed in the frontal region, with maximum values above the pycnocline in coincidence with the maximum chlorophyll; (3) the diapycnal fluxes of nitrate enabled the maintenance of the bloom in the frontal area throughout the spring-neap tidal cycle; (4) from spring to neap tide the chains length was significantly reduced; (5) during neap tide, the less intense vertical diffusion of nutrients, as well as the lower turbulence around the chains, intensified nutrient-depleted conditions and, thus, very large chains became disadvantageous. To explain this pattern, we suggest that size plasticity is an important ecological trait driving phytoplankton species competition. Although this plasticity behavior is well known from experiments in the laboratory, it has never been reported from observations in the field.
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spelling pubmed-39387562014-03-04 Biophysical Interactions Control the Size and Abundance of Large Phytoplankton Chains at the Ushant Tidal Front Landeira, José M. Ferron, Bruno Lunven, Michel Morin, Pascal Marié, Louis Sourisseau, Marc PLoS One Research Article Phytoplankton blooms are usually dominated by chain-forming diatom species that can alter food pathways from primary producers to predators by reducing the interactions between intermediate trophic levels. The food-web modifications are determined by the length of the chains; however, the estimation is biased because traditional sampling strategies damage the chains and, therefore, change the phytoplankton size structure. Sedimentological studies around oceanic fronts have shown high concentrations of giant diatom mats (>1 cm in length), suggesting that the size of diatom chains is underestimated in the pelagic realm. Here, we investigate the variability in size and abundance of phytoplankton chains at the Ushant tidal front (NW France) using the Video Fluorescence Analyzer (VFA), a novel and non-invasive system. CTD and Scanfish profiling characterized a strong temperature and chlorophyll front, separating mixed coastal waters from the oceanic-stratified domain. In order to elucidate spring-neap variations in the front, vertical microstructure profiler was used to estimate the turbulence and vertical nitrate flux. Key findings were: (1) the VFA system recorded large diatom chains up to 10.7 mm in length; (2) chains were mainly distributed in the frontal region, with maximum values above the pycnocline in coincidence with the maximum chlorophyll; (3) the diapycnal fluxes of nitrate enabled the maintenance of the bloom in the frontal area throughout the spring-neap tidal cycle; (4) from spring to neap tide the chains length was significantly reduced; (5) during neap tide, the less intense vertical diffusion of nutrients, as well as the lower turbulence around the chains, intensified nutrient-depleted conditions and, thus, very large chains became disadvantageous. To explain this pattern, we suggest that size plasticity is an important ecological trait driving phytoplankton species competition. Although this plasticity behavior is well known from experiments in the laboratory, it has never been reported from observations in the field. Public Library of Science 2014-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3938756/ /pubmed/24587384 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090507 Text en © 2014 Landeira et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Landeira, José M.
Ferron, Bruno
Lunven, Michel
Morin, Pascal
Marié, Louis
Sourisseau, Marc
Biophysical Interactions Control the Size and Abundance of Large Phytoplankton Chains at the Ushant Tidal Front
title Biophysical Interactions Control the Size and Abundance of Large Phytoplankton Chains at the Ushant Tidal Front
title_full Biophysical Interactions Control the Size and Abundance of Large Phytoplankton Chains at the Ushant Tidal Front
title_fullStr Biophysical Interactions Control the Size and Abundance of Large Phytoplankton Chains at the Ushant Tidal Front
title_full_unstemmed Biophysical Interactions Control the Size and Abundance of Large Phytoplankton Chains at the Ushant Tidal Front
title_short Biophysical Interactions Control the Size and Abundance of Large Phytoplankton Chains at the Ushant Tidal Front
title_sort biophysical interactions control the size and abundance of large phytoplankton chains at the ushant tidal front
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3938756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24587384
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090507
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