Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific

Biogeochemical processes in the sea are triggered in various ways by chlorophyll-containing phytoplankton groups. While the variability of chlorophyll concentration at sea has been observed from satellites for several years, these groups are known only from cruises which are limited in space and tim...

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Main Authors: /Dandonneau, Yves, /Montel, Yves, /Blanchot, Jean, Giraudeau, J., Neveux, J.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010035684
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftird:oai:ird.fr:fdi:010035684 2024-09-15T18:23:05+00:00 Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific /Dandonneau, Yves /Montel, Yves /Blanchot, Jean Giraudeau, J. Neveux, J. 2006 https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010035684 EN eng https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010035684 oai:ird.fr:fdi:010035684 Dandonneau Yves, Montel Yves, Blanchot Jean, Giraudeau J., Neveux J. Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific. 2006, 53 (4), p. 689-712 text 2006 ftird 2024-08-15T05:57:42Z Biogeochemical processes in the sea are triggered in various ways by chlorophyll-containing phytoplankton groups. While the variability of chlorophyll concentration at sea has been observed from satellites for several years, these groups are known only from cruises which are limited in space and time. The Geochemistry, Phytoplankton and Color of the Ocean programme (GeP&CO) was set up to describe and understand the variability of phytoplankton composition on large spatial scales under a multi-year sampling strategy. It was based on sea-surface sampling along the route of the merchant ship Contship London which travelled four times a year from Le Havre (France) to Noumea (New Caledonia) via New York, Panama and Auckland. Observations included the measurement of photosynthetic pigments, counts of picoplanktonic cells by flow cytometry (Prochlorococcus, Synechococcus, and picoeucaryotes) and counting and identification of coccolithophores. The results confirmed that tropical areas have low seasonal variability and are characterized by relatively high divinyl-chlorophyll a and zeaxanthin concentration and that the variability is strongest at high latitudes-where the phytoplankton biomass and population structure are found to have large seasonal cycles. Thus, the spring bloom in the North Atlantic and an austral winter bloom north of New Zealand are marked by chlorophyll concentrations which are often higher than 0.5 mu g l(-1) and by high concentration of fucoxanthin (a pigment used as an indicator for diatoms), while summer populations are dominated by Prochlorococcus sp. and have low chlorophyll concentrations. Apart from this yearly bloom at temperate latitudes, fucoxanthin is scarce, except in the equatorial upwelling zone in the eastern Pacific Ocean, where it is found in moderate amounts. In this region, relatively high chlorophyll concentrations extend generally as far as 14 degrees S and do not respond to the seasonal strengthening of the equatorial upwelling during the austral winter. Prochlorococcus, ... Text North Atlantic IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
institution Open Polar
collection IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
op_collection_id ftird
language English
description Biogeochemical processes in the sea are triggered in various ways by chlorophyll-containing phytoplankton groups. While the variability of chlorophyll concentration at sea has been observed from satellites for several years, these groups are known only from cruises which are limited in space and time. The Geochemistry, Phytoplankton and Color of the Ocean programme (GeP&CO) was set up to describe and understand the variability of phytoplankton composition on large spatial scales under a multi-year sampling strategy. It was based on sea-surface sampling along the route of the merchant ship Contship London which travelled four times a year from Le Havre (France) to Noumea (New Caledonia) via New York, Panama and Auckland. Observations included the measurement of photosynthetic pigments, counts of picoplanktonic cells by flow cytometry (Prochlorococcus, Synechococcus, and picoeucaryotes) and counting and identification of coccolithophores. The results confirmed that tropical areas have low seasonal variability and are characterized by relatively high divinyl-chlorophyll a and zeaxanthin concentration and that the variability is strongest at high latitudes-where the phytoplankton biomass and population structure are found to have large seasonal cycles. Thus, the spring bloom in the North Atlantic and an austral winter bloom north of New Zealand are marked by chlorophyll concentrations which are often higher than 0.5 mu g l(-1) and by high concentration of fucoxanthin (a pigment used as an indicator for diatoms), while summer populations are dominated by Prochlorococcus sp. and have low chlorophyll concentrations. Apart from this yearly bloom at temperate latitudes, fucoxanthin is scarce, except in the equatorial upwelling zone in the eastern Pacific Ocean, where it is found in moderate amounts. In this region, relatively high chlorophyll concentrations extend generally as far as 14 degrees S and do not respond to the seasonal strengthening of the equatorial upwelling during the austral winter. Prochlorococcus, ...
format Text
author /Dandonneau, Yves
/Montel, Yves
/Blanchot, Jean
Giraudeau, J.
Neveux, J.
spellingShingle /Dandonneau, Yves
/Montel, Yves
/Blanchot, Jean
Giraudeau, J.
Neveux, J.
Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific
author_facet /Dandonneau, Yves
/Montel, Yves
/Blanchot, Jean
Giraudeau, J.
Neveux, J.
author_sort /Dandonneau, Yves
title Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific
title_short Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific
title_full Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific
title_fullStr Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific
title_full_unstemmed Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific
title_sort temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the north atlantic and tropical southwestern pacific
publishDate 2006
url https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010035684
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010035684
oai:ird.fr:fdi:010035684
Dandonneau Yves, Montel Yves, Blanchot Jean, Giraudeau J., Neveux J. Temporal variability in phytoplankton pigments, picoplankton and coccolithophores along a transect through the North Atlantic and tropical southwestern Pacific. 2006, 53 (4), p. 689-712
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