Light limitation of phytoplankton biomass and macronutrient utilization in the Southern Ocean

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is unique in that it has continually high concentrations of major plant nutrients but low phytoplankton biomass. This enigmatic phenomenon is the focus of significant speculation that trace nutrients, including Fe, may limit phytoplankton crop size. Global cli...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: B. Greg Mitchell, Eric A. Brody, Osmund Holm-hansen, Charles Mcclain, James Bishop
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.563.2544
http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_36/issue_8/1662.pdf
Description
Summary:The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is unique in that it has continually high concentrations of major plant nutrients but low phytoplankton biomass. This enigmatic phenomenon is the focus of significant speculation that trace nutrients, including Fe, may limit phytoplankton crop size. Global climatologies indicate that the ACC is a region with low surface temperatures, weak density stratification, little summertime surface solar irradiance, and strong wind stress. These physical phenomena act to limit growth rates of the phytoplankton community. Using a photo-physiological description of phytoplankton growth in a simple one-dimensional ecosystem model forced by observations or climatologies of mixing depth and surface irradiance, we make an evaluation of the potential for massive, nutrient-exhausting, phytoplankton blooms forming in the ACC. The ACC has persistent mixed layers in excess of 50 m. Literature values and model optimization indicate that the minimal aggregate specific loss rate for phytoplankton, including respiration, sinking, and grazing, is- 0.2 d-l. For a minimal loss rate and typical physical conditions of stratification and surface irradiance, the model predicts that phytoplankton in the ACC would not utilize> 10 % of the available macronutrients. Without a mechanism for increasing the strength of stratification, we predict that massive Fe additions to the Southern Ocean would fail to signif-icantly mitigate the atmospheric CO, derived from fossil fuel. I Corresponding author. Acknowledgments We acknowledge the organizers of the American So-ciety of Limnology and Oceanography symposium for which this paper was prepared. In particular, the efforts