Seabird guano enhances phytoplankton production in the Southern Ocean

Highlights • Empirical approach was used to study effects of seabird guano on marine phytoplankton. • Seabird guano enhances phytoplankton productivity in different water masses. • Nutrient run-off from seabird colonies is a significant nutrient source. Abstract Six incubation experiments were carri...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
Main Authors: Shatova, Olga, Wing, Stephen R., Gault-Ringold, Melanie, Wing, Lucy, Hoffmann, Linn J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/33520/
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/33520/1/Shatova.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jembe.2016.07.004
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Summary:Highlights • Empirical approach was used to study effects of seabird guano on marine phytoplankton. • Seabird guano enhances phytoplankton productivity in different water masses. • Nutrient run-off from seabird colonies is a significant nutrient source. Abstract Six incubation experiments were carried out to investigate the phytoplankton biomass response to seabird guano-enrichment under different nutrient regimes. Study locations included Antarctic waters of the Ross Sea and sub-Antarctic waters offshore of the Otago Peninsula, both being characterized by iron limitation of phytoplankton productivity in summer, the Sub-Tropical Frontal Zone offshore of the Snares Islands, which is generally micronutrient-replete, and the island wake waters of the Snares Islands, which have a high nutrient supply from land. In all of the experiments the increase of phytoplankton biomass was higher in the treatments with guano addition compared to the controls. Guano additions were compared to Fe and macronutrients treatments (both added in quantities similar to those in the guano treatment) to shed light on which constituent(s) of guano are responsible for the observed increases in phytoplankton biomass. Macronutrients increased the phytoplankton biomass in the Sub-Tropical Frontal Zone, however, the response was less prominent than in the Guano treatment, suggesting synergetic effects of nutrients in seabird guano on phytoplankton production. It was also found that the pattern of response varied between the water masses with 6–10 days lag phase in the Sub-Antarctic water mass and no lag phase in Sub-Tropical Frontal Zone. The calculations presented here suggest that micro- and macronutrients delivered from seabird colonies on some of the sub-Antarctic islands may provide a significant amount of limiting nutrients to the nutrient budget of the surrounding coastal waters, potentially sufficient to sustain a local phytoplankton bloom. Findings of the present study indicate that biological recycling of nutrients by seabirds likely ...