Changes in biogenic carbon flow in response to sea surface warming

Title
Changes in biogenic carbon flow in response to sea surface warming

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2009

Authors

Wohlers J, Engel A, Zollner E, Breithaupt P, Jurgens K, Hoppe HG, Sommer U, Riebesell U

Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Volume
106

Pagination
7067-7072

ISBN Number

Keywords

biological feedbacks, carbon cycle, climate change, global warming, Marine bacteria, mesocosm, Kiel indoor, 1.4 m3, Germany

Abstract

It is responsible for approximately half of global primary production,sustains worldwide fisheries, and plays an important role inthe global carbon cycle. Ocean warming caused by anthropogenicclimate change is already starting to impact the marine biota, withpossible consequences for ocean productivity and ecosystem services.Because temperature sensitivities of marine autotrophic andheterotrophic processes differ greatly, ocean warming is expectedto cause major shifts in the flow of carbon and energy through thepelagic system. Attempts to integrate such biological responsesinto marine ecosystem and biogeochemical models suffer from alack of empirical data. Here, we show, using an indoor-mesocosmapproach, that rising temperature accelerates respiratory consumptionof organic carbon relative to autotrophic production in anatural plankton community. Increasing temperature by 2–6 °Chence decreased the biological drawdown of dissolved inorganiccarbon in the surface layer by up to 31%. Moreover, warmingshifted the partitioning between particulate and dissolved organiccarbon toward an enhanced accumulation of dissolved compounds.In line with these findings, the loss of organic carbonthrough sinking was significantly reduced at elevated temperatures.The observed changes in biogenic carbon flow have thepotential to reduce the transfer of primary produced organicmatter to higher trophic levels, weaken the ocean’s biologicalcarbon pump, and hence provide a positive feedback to risingatmospheric CO2.

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Top-down and bottom-up influences of jellyfish on primary productivity and planktonic assemblages

Title
Top-down and bottom-up influences of jellyfish on primary productivity and planktonic assemblages
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2009
Authors

West EJ, Pitt KA, Welsh DT, Koop K, Rissikc D

Journal
Limnology & Oceanography
Volume
54
Pagination
2058-2071
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top down, jellyfish, Primary production, plankton assemblages, mesocosm, Smiths Lake, Australia, freshwater, 3 m3

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Novel virus dynamics in an Emiliania huxleyi bloom

Title
Novel virus dynamics in an Emiliania huxleyi bloom
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2009
Authors

Sorensen G, Baker AC, Hall MJ, Munn CB, Schroeder DC

Journal
Journal of Plankton Research
Volume
31
Pagination
797-791
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Keywords

Emiliania huxleyi, virus, DNA, 11 m3, Espegrend, Bergen, Norway, mesocosm

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Effects of dust deposition on iron cycle in the surface Mediterranean Sea: results from a mesocosm seeding experiment

Title
Effects of dust deposition on iron cycle in the surface Mediterranean Sea: results from a mesocosm seeding experiment

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2010

Authors

Wagener T, Guieu C, Leblond N

Journal
Biogeosciences

Volume
7

Pagination
3769-3781

ISBN Number

Keywords

Dust deposition, Iron, mediterranean, mesocosm, 52 m3, Elbo bay, France

Abstract

Soil dust deposition is recognized as a majorsource of iron to the open ocean at global and regional scales.However, the processes that control the speciation and cycleof iron in the surface ocean after dust deposition are poorlydocumented mainly due to the logistical difficulties to investigatein-situ, natural dust events. The development ofclean mesocosms in the frame of the DUNE project (a DUstexperiment in a low Nutrient low chlorophyll Ecosystem)was a unique opportunity to investigate these processes atthe unexplored scale of one dust deposition event. Duringthe DUNE-1-P mesocosm seeding experiment, iron stocks(dissolved and particulate concentrations in the water column)and fluxes (export of particulate iron in sediment traps)were followed during 8 days after an artificial dust seedingmimicking a wet deposition of 10 gm?2. The addition ofdust at the surface of the mesocosms was immediately followedby a decrease of dissolved iron [dFe] concentrationin the 0–10m water column. This decrease was likely dueto dFe scavenging on settling dust particles and mineral organicaggregates. The scavenging ratio of dissolved iron ondust particles averaged 0.37±0.12 nmol mg?1. Batch dissolutionexperiments conducted in parallel to the mesocosm experimentshowed a increase (up to 600 %) in dust iron dissolutioncapacity in dust-fertilized waters compared to controlconditions. This study gives evidences of complex and unexpectedeffects of dust deposition on surface ocean biogeochemistry:(1) large dust deposition events may be a sink forsurface ocean dissolved iron and (2) successive dust depositionevents may induce different biogeochemical responsesin the surface ocean.

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Response of lower trophic organisms to nutrient input and effects on carbon budget: a mesocosm experiment

Title
Response of lower trophic organisms to nutrient input and effects on carbon budget: a mesocosm experiment

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2010

Authors

Tsuda A, Fukami K, Kiyosawa H, Suzuki K, Takeda S, Nishioka J, Takahashi M, Johnson K, Wong CS

Journal
Plankton & Benthos Research

Volume
5

Pagination
144-155

ISBN Number

Keywords

Bacteria, copepods, diatom bloom, heterotrophic dinoflagellate, mesocosm, microzooplankton, trophodynamics, Patricia Bay, British Columbia, Canada, 20 m3

Abstract

Abstract: The roles of heterotrophic organisms (microzooplankton, mesozooplankton, bacteria and heterotrophic nanoflagellates) were examined during a nutrient enrichment experiment using a mesocosm in Saanich Inlet, British Columbia, Canada. Grazing rates of microzooplankton, copepods, and Noctiluca scintillans were respectively estimated by the dilution method, from the egg production, and the apparent growth rate. The primary production increased by about 11 times during the initial 3 days, and the grazing rate by zooplankton also increased by 7.4 times. The primary production exceeded the grazing rate during the initial 5 days, after that, almost balanced rates were observed. Biomass peaks of bacteria and HNFs (heterotrophic nanoflagellates) were observed after the decline of the phytoplankton bloom. Bacterial production and HNF bacterivory gradually increased from the beginning to the end of the experiment. Microzooplankton consistently removed about half of the primary production. The contribution of microzooplankton to grazing was largest during the initial 7 days. Heterotrophic dinoflagellates were the most dominant component of the microzooplankton, but oligotrich ciliates showed the fastest growth response to phytoplankton production. Noctiluca scintillans became an important grazer after the bloom. Overall, the contribution of microzooplankton grazing was the largest of the processes through which phytoplankton were lost. Cell sinking was a minor component contributing to loss of phytoplankton. Thus, oligotrich ciliates and heterotrophic dinoflagellates were the most plausible organisms contributingto the steady state of phytoplankton concentrations.

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Nutrient pathways through the microbial food web: principles and predictability discussed, based on five different experiments

Title
Nutrient pathways through the microbial food web: principles and predictability discussed, based on five different experiments

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2010

Authors

Thingstad TF, Cuevas LA

Journal
Aquatic Microbial Ecology

Volume
61

Pagination
249-260

ISBN Number

Keywords

microbial food web, stoichiometry, Predator control, mesocosm, Ny Alesund, Svalbard, Norway, Denmark, 1 m3

Abstract

Although explanatory and predictive powers are 2 closely interconnected aspects ofconceptual and mathematical models of complex systems, the two are not equivalent. The 2 aspectsare discussed here for the microbial part of photic zone food webs of the marine pelagic. We focus onthe specific question of how limiting nutrients are transferred from the dissolved form, through themicrobial food web, to mesozooplankton. For this purpose, 5 different nutrient addition experimentsare reviewed and compared to a ‘simplest possible’ conceptual food web model. The experimentsrange in scale from artificial food webs constructed in laboratory chemostats, via mesocosm experiments,to a Lagrangian open-ocean addition experiment and cover time scales from days to weeks.We conclude that main system responses in all cases can be explained within the framework of thesimple model, and that each experiment therefore also adds credibility to the basic concepts of thismodel. However, different system attributes profoundly affect the pathway and speed of nutrienttransfer in each experiment. A re-occurring theme seems to be how the interactions between flexiblestoichiometry and predatory processes modify experimental outcomes. Understanding the flexibilityin the behavior of the system has thus increased with each experiment, but the requirement for newad hoc assumptions to be added to the basic model structure in each case makes reliable predictionsof the experimental outcome appear only possible with further model elaboration

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The fate of Cu, Zn, and Cd in the initial stage of water system contamination: The effect of phytoplankton activity

Title
The fate of Cu, Zn, and Cd in the initial stage of water system contamination: The effect of phytoplankton activity

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2010

Authors

Smolyakov BS, Ryzhikh AP, Romanov RE

Journal
Journal of Hazardous Materials

Volume
184

Pagination
819-825

ISBN Number

Keywords

Freshwater bodies, Contamination, Heavy metals, phytoplankton, Biosorption, Mesomodelling, mesocosm, 2 m3, Novosibirskoye Reservoir, Russia

Abstract

The fate of Cu, Zn and Cd after their entry into an unpolluted fresh water body was studied as a function of a condition of a natural phytoplankton community. In a field experiment, additives of metals entered into light and dark mesocosms twice to simulate effects of primary and repeated contamination. Over 31 days, the reproduction of new generation of a phytoplankton as renewable source of the suspended particles capable to metal biosorption was higher in a light mesocosm. As a result the residual concentration of metals in water decreased faster and their content in the settled deposits was higher in a light mesocosm, than in a dark mesocosm. Efficiency of planktonic channel in deducing of metals from water with settling deposits (in the order of Cu > Zn > Cd) depends on intensity of a phytoplankton reproduction in the initial stage of water ecosystem contamination.

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Behavior of metals (Cu, Zn and Cd) in the initial stage of water system contamination: Effect of pH and suspended particles

Title
Behavior of metals (Cu, Zn and Cd) in the initial stage of water system contamination: Effect of pH and suspended particles

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2010

Authors

Smolyakov BS, Ryzhikh AP, Bortnikova SB, Saeva OP, Chernova NY

Journal
Applied Geochemistry

Volume
25

Pagination
1153-1161

ISBN Number

Keywords

Freshwater bodies, Contamination, Heavy metals, phytoplankton, Biosorption, Mesomodelling, mesocosm, 2 m3, Novosibirskoye Reservoir, Russia

Abstract

The fate of potentially harmful metals (PHM) after their entry into an unpolluted fresh water bodydepends on the physicochemical and biological parameters of the aquatic ecosystem. This paper considersthe effect of pH and suspended particles (SP) on the behavior of Cu, Zn and Cd when they enter a freshwater reservoir. In a field experiment, four mesocosms were constructed in the Novosibirskoye Reservoirto allow systematic variation of SP concentration (15 or 250 mg/L) and pH (8.5 or 6.5). The initial concentrationsof Cu, Zn and Cd in the mesocosms were 1000, 1000 and 200 lg/L, respectively. Natural bottomsediments were used to provide additional mineral SP, and water hyacinth was used as a floating plantspecies. Over 11 days, measurements were made of several indicators: residual metal concentration insolution ([PHM]w); metal concentration in SP ([PHM]s); primary productivity of the phytoplanktoncommunity; mass of settled SP; PHM concentration in settled SP; and PHM bioaccumulation by waterhyacinth. The ratio [PHM]w/[PHM]s in the water varied in the order Cu Zn > Cd) onto mineral SP andPHM biosorption by planktonic organisms. Phytoplankton acts as a renewable source of organic SP andplays an important role in metal removal from the water in the mesocosms. After 11 days the residualconcentrations of Cu, Zn and Cd in the mesocosm without SP addition (initial SP concentration was15 mg/L) were 272, 355 and 84 lg/L, respectively. The residual concentrations of Cu, Zn and Cd inmesocosms with SP addition were 57, 100 and 14 lg/L at pH 8.5 and 80, 172 and 20 lg/L at pH 6.5,respectively. Therefore, addition of SP resulted in faster and more complete removal of metals into thebottom sediments. Floating plants (water hyacinth) accumulated PHM (Cu > Zn > Cd) more effectivelyat pH 8.5 than at pH 6.5, and PHM concentrations in the roots were higher than in settling SP. The generaltrends of PHM removal from contaminated water via sedimentation and bioaccumulation are comparedwith changes of metal speciation in solution.

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Effect of tidal resuspension on benthic–pelagic coupling in an experimental ecosystem study

Title
Effect of tidal resuspension on benthic–pelagic coupling in an experimental ecosystem study

Publication Type
Journal Article

Year of Publication
2010

Authors

Porter ET, Mason RP, Sanford LP

Journal
Marine Ecology Progress Series

Volume
413

Pagination
33-53

ISBN Number

Keywords

Tidal resuspension, Benthic–pelagic coupling, Shear stress, Shear velocity, STURM, mesocosm, 1 m3, Maryland, USA, Ecosystem

Abstract

To test the effect of sediment resuspension on the nutrient and ecosystem dynamics weperformed a 4 wk experiment in three 1000 l shear-turbulence-resuspension-mesocosm (STURM)resuspension (R) tanks and three 1000 l non-resuspension (NR) tanks. All tanks contained defaunatedmuddy sediment and brackish estuarine water and had similar water-column turbulence intensities(~1 cm s–1), energy dissipation rates (~0.08 cm2 s–3), and tidal cycles (4 h mixing-on and 2 h mixingoff).However, while bottom shear velocity (stress) was low in the NR tanks, high instantaneousbottom shear produced resuspension in the R tanks during the mixing-on cycles. Tidal resuspensionin the R tanks resulted in concentrations of 120 to 220 mg l–1 total suspended solids when mixing wason, decreasing to between 10 and 20 mg l–1 when mixing was off. Particulate nitrogen, phosphorus,and carbon concentrations, as well as dissolved inorganic nitrogen, nitrate + nitrite, and phosphatelevels were higher in the R tanks. Phytoplankton biomass was also higher in the R tanks, though lightwas limiting. Tidal resuspension affected water-column algal and zooplankton community compositionand induced significantly higher concentrations of brown tide Aureococcus anophagefferens.Microphytobenthos biomass was significantly higher in the NR tanks. Dissolved inorganic nitrogensediment effluxes were similar in both tanks; however, polychaetes and amphipods developed in theNR, but not in the R tank sediments. Tidal resuspension shifted processes from the benthos to thewater column. Regular tidal resuspension profoundly affected ecosystem structure and function,often through indirect pathways and linkages.

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Effects of nutrients and turbulence in the production of transparent exopolymer particles: a mesocosm study

Title
Effects of nutrients and turbulence in the production of transparent exopolymer particles: a mesocosm study
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2010
Authors

Pedrotti ML, Peters F, Beauvais S, Vidal M, Egge JK, Jacobsen A, Marrase C

Journal
Marine Ecology Progress Series
Volume
419
Pagination
57-69
ISBN Number
Keywords

Transparent exopolymer particles, TEP, phytoplankton, Particulate Organic Carbon, POC, Turbulence, mesocosm, Raunefjorden, Bergen, Norway, 2.6 m3, Nutrients

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