Spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the Laurentian Trough

Spatial variability within a single oceanographic station (10-1000m radius) is poorly understood, potentially limiting detection of short-lived moderate fluctuations in organic matter input and the benthic response. Between-station and inter-annual comparisons are also confounded by unknown local sp...

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Main Authors: Silverberg, Norman, Juniper, S. Kim, Lavigne, Carole
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13362
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spelling ftipnmexicoir:oai:www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx:123456789/13362 2023-07-16T03:59:57+02:00 Spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the Laurentian Trough Silverberg, Norman Juniper, S. Kim Lavigne, Carole 1997 http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13362 en_US eng Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers 0967-0637 http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13362 Spatial variation North Atlantic Organic matter Population density Bloom Saint Lawrence Estuary Time variation Bacterioplankton Benthic zone Phytoplankton Brackish water environment Summer Microbial activity Bacteria Environmental factor Article 1997 ftipnmexicoir 2023-06-28T10:39:39Z Spatial variability within a single oceanographic station (10-1000m radius) is poorly understood, potentially limiting detection of short-lived moderate fluctuations in organic matter input and the benthic response. Between-station and inter-annual comparisons are also confounded by unknown local spatial variations. The primary objective of this study was to document spatial variability in benthic microbial activity at a single station in the Laurentian Trough (350 m depth) during the early summer phytoplankton bloom period. We also evaluated the influence of local spatial variability on the detection of a benthic response to bloom-related increases in organic matter sedimentation. Box coring and deployment of multicylinder drifting sediment traps were carried out daily over a 20-day period. Two spatial scales were sampled within one boxcore, and a second boxcore provided data on between-core variability. Microbial processes (bacterial abundance, extracellular enzyme activity and 3H-thymidine incorporation into DNA) showed significant spatial variability at the 10-100 m and dm scales, and were correlated with the distribution of photosynthetic pigments and polychaete abundance in the sediments. Polychaetes also influenced microbial activity at finer spatial scales, in relation to tube location. Bacterial extracellular enzyme activity and thymidine incorporation into DNA behaved independently at all spatial scales studied, arguing for a decoupling of these two microbial processes. Significant variation in organic matter sedimentation between cylinders on drifting arrays is attributed to particle aggregation. This may contribute to spatial irregularity in organic matter supply to the seafloor. Spatial variability at the 10-100 m scale for all measures of microbial activity was of magnitude comparable to temporal signals over the course of the phytoplankton bloom. We suggest that local spatial variability and microbial responses to bloom events may be site specific, controlled by factors such as long term ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic El Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN): Repositorio Digital Institucional (RDI)
institution Open Polar
collection El Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN): Repositorio Digital Institucional (RDI)
op_collection_id ftipnmexicoir
language English
topic Spatial variation
North Atlantic
Organic matter
Population density
Bloom
Saint Lawrence Estuary
Time variation
Bacterioplankton
Benthic zone
Phytoplankton
Brackish water environment
Summer
Microbial activity
Bacteria
Environmental factor
spellingShingle Spatial variation
North Atlantic
Organic matter
Population density
Bloom
Saint Lawrence Estuary
Time variation
Bacterioplankton
Benthic zone
Phytoplankton
Brackish water environment
Summer
Microbial activity
Bacteria
Environmental factor
Silverberg, Norman
Juniper, S. Kim
Lavigne, Carole
Spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the Laurentian Trough
topic_facet Spatial variation
North Atlantic
Organic matter
Population density
Bloom
Saint Lawrence Estuary
Time variation
Bacterioplankton
Benthic zone
Phytoplankton
Brackish water environment
Summer
Microbial activity
Bacteria
Environmental factor
description Spatial variability within a single oceanographic station (10-1000m radius) is poorly understood, potentially limiting detection of short-lived moderate fluctuations in organic matter input and the benthic response. Between-station and inter-annual comparisons are also confounded by unknown local spatial variations. The primary objective of this study was to document spatial variability in benthic microbial activity at a single station in the Laurentian Trough (350 m depth) during the early summer phytoplankton bloom period. We also evaluated the influence of local spatial variability on the detection of a benthic response to bloom-related increases in organic matter sedimentation. Box coring and deployment of multicylinder drifting sediment traps were carried out daily over a 20-day period. Two spatial scales were sampled within one boxcore, and a second boxcore provided data on between-core variability. Microbial processes (bacterial abundance, extracellular enzyme activity and 3H-thymidine incorporation into DNA) showed significant spatial variability at the 10-100 m and dm scales, and were correlated with the distribution of photosynthetic pigments and polychaete abundance in the sediments. Polychaetes also influenced microbial activity at finer spatial scales, in relation to tube location. Bacterial extracellular enzyme activity and thymidine incorporation into DNA behaved independently at all spatial scales studied, arguing for a decoupling of these two microbial processes. Significant variation in organic matter sedimentation between cylinders on drifting arrays is attributed to particle aggregation. This may contribute to spatial irregularity in organic matter supply to the seafloor. Spatial variability at the 10-100 m scale for all measures of microbial activity was of magnitude comparable to temporal signals over the course of the phytoplankton bloom. We suggest that local spatial variability and microbial responses to bloom events may be site specific, controlled by factors such as long term ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Silverberg, Norman
Juniper, S. Kim
Lavigne, Carole
author_facet Silverberg, Norman
Juniper, S. Kim
Lavigne, Carole
author_sort Silverberg, Norman
title Spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the Laurentian Trough
title_short Spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the Laurentian Trough
title_full Spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the Laurentian Trough
title_fullStr Spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the Laurentian Trough
title_full_unstemmed Spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the Laurentian Trough
title_sort spatio-temporal variability in benthic microbial activity and particle flux in the laurentian trough
publisher Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
publishDate 1997
url http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13362
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation 0967-0637
http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13362
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