Leads in Arctic pack ice enable early phytoplankton blooms below snow-covered sea ic
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11826Dato
2017-01-19Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Assmy, Philipp; Fernández-Méndez, Mar; Duarte, Pedro; Meyer, Amelie; Randelhoff, Achim; Mundy, Christopher John; Olsen, Lasse; Kauko, Hanna M.; Bailey, Allison; Chierici, Melissa; Cohen, Lana; Doulgeris, Anthony Paul; Ehn, Jens K.; Fransson, Agneta; Gerland, Sebastian; Hop, Haakon; Hudson, Stephen R.; Hughes, Nick; Itkin, Polona; Johnsen, Geir; King, Jennifer A.; Koch, Boris P.; Koenig, Zoe; Kwasniewski, Slawomir; Laney, Samuel R.; Nikolaus, Marcel; Pavlov, Alexey K.; Polashenski, Christopher M.; Provost, Christine; Rösel, Anja; Sandbu, Marthe; Spreen, Gunnar; Smedsrud, Lars H.; Sundfjord, Arild; Taskjelle, Torbjørn; Tatarek, Agnieszka; Wiktor, Josef; Wagner, Penelope Mae; Wold, Anette; Steen, Harald; Granskog, Mats A.Sammendrag
The Arctic icescape is rapidly transforming from a thicker multiyear ice cover to a thinner and largely
seasonal first-year ice cover with significant consequences for Arctic primary production. One critical
challenge is to understand how productivity will change within the next decades. Recent studies have
reported extensive phytoplankton blooms beneath ponded sea ice during summer, indicating that
satellite-based Arctic annual primary production estimates may be significantly underestimated. Here
we present a unique time-series of a phytoplankton spring bloom observed beneath snow-covered
Arctic pack ice. The bloom, dominated by the haptophyte algae
Phaeocystis pouchetii
, caused near
depletion of the surface nitrate inventory and a decline in dissolved inorganic carbon by 16
±
6 g C m
−
2
.
Ocean circulation characteristics in the area indicated that the bloom developed
in situ
despite the
snow-covered sea ice. Leads in the dynamic ice cover provided added sunlight necessary to initiate and
sustain the bloom. Phytoplankton blooms beneath snow-covered ice might become more common and
widespread in the future Arctic Ocean with frequent lead formation due to thinner and more dynamic
sea ice despite projected increases in high-Arctic snowfall. This could alter productivity, marine food
webs and carbon sequestration in the Arctic Ocean
Beskrivelse
Source at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep40850