Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean

Little is known about the distribution of coccolithophores in Arctic regions, or the reasons why they are absent from certain locations but thrive in others. Factors thought to affect cocco­lithophore distribution include nutrients, salinity, temperature and light, as well as carbonate chemistry par...

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Published in:Marine Ecology Progress Series
Main Authors: Charalampopoulou, Anastasia, Poulton, Alex J., Tyrrell, Toby, Lucas, Mike I.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/193701/
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:193701 2023-07-30T03:59:50+02:00 Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean Charalampopoulou, Anastasia Poulton, Alex J. Tyrrell, Toby Lucas, Mike I. 2011 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/193701/ unknown Charalampopoulou, Anastasia, Poulton, Alex J., Tyrrell, Toby and Lucas, Mike I. (2011) Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 431, 25-43. (doi:10.3354/meps09140 <http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps09140>). Article PeerReviewed 2011 ftsouthampton https://doi.org/10.3354/meps09140 2023-07-09T21:23:07Z Little is known about the distribution of coccolithophores in Arctic regions, or the reasons why they are absent from certain locations but thrive in others. Factors thought to affect cocco­lithophore distribution include nutrients, salinity, temperature and light, as well as carbonate chemistry parameters. Here we present data collected in summer 2008 along a transect between the North Sea and Svalbard (Arctic). Coccolithophore abundance and diversity were measured and compared with a set of environmental variables that included macronutrients, salinity, temperature, irradiance, pH and ?calcite. Eighteen coccolithophore species were found in the southern North Sea where cocco­lithophores were previously thought to be absent. In the ice-covered region north of Svalbard, cocco­lithophores were scarce and dominated by the family Papposphaeraceae. A multivariate approach showed that changes in pH and mixed layer irradiance explained most of the variation in cocco­lithophore distribution and community composition (Spearman’s rS = 0.62). Differences between the Svalbard population and those from other regions were mostly explained by pH (rS = 0.45), whereas mixed layer irradiance explained most of the variation between the North Sea, Norwegian Sea and Arctic water assemblages (rS = 0.40). Estimates of cell specific calcification rates showed that species composition can considerably affect community calcification. Consequently, future ocean acidification (changes in pH) and stratification due to global warming (changes in mixed layer irradiance) may influence pelagic calcification by inducing changes in the species composition of cocco­lithophore communities. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Arctic Ocean Global warming Norwegian Sea Ocean acidification Svalbard University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Arctic Arctic Ocean Norwegian Sea Svalbard Marine Ecology Progress Series 431 25 43
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language unknown
description Little is known about the distribution of coccolithophores in Arctic regions, or the reasons why they are absent from certain locations but thrive in others. Factors thought to affect cocco­lithophore distribution include nutrients, salinity, temperature and light, as well as carbonate chemistry parameters. Here we present data collected in summer 2008 along a transect between the North Sea and Svalbard (Arctic). Coccolithophore abundance and diversity were measured and compared with a set of environmental variables that included macronutrients, salinity, temperature, irradiance, pH and ?calcite. Eighteen coccolithophore species were found in the southern North Sea where cocco­lithophores were previously thought to be absent. In the ice-covered region north of Svalbard, cocco­lithophores were scarce and dominated by the family Papposphaeraceae. A multivariate approach showed that changes in pH and mixed layer irradiance explained most of the variation in cocco­lithophore distribution and community composition (Spearman’s rS = 0.62). Differences between the Svalbard population and those from other regions were mostly explained by pH (rS = 0.45), whereas mixed layer irradiance explained most of the variation between the North Sea, Norwegian Sea and Arctic water assemblages (rS = 0.40). Estimates of cell specific calcification rates showed that species composition can considerably affect community calcification. Consequently, future ocean acidification (changes in pH) and stratification due to global warming (changes in mixed layer irradiance) may influence pelagic calcification by inducing changes in the species composition of cocco­lithophore communities.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Charalampopoulou, Anastasia
Poulton, Alex J.
Tyrrell, Toby
Lucas, Mike I.
spellingShingle Charalampopoulou, Anastasia
Poulton, Alex J.
Tyrrell, Toby
Lucas, Mike I.
Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean
author_facet Charalampopoulou, Anastasia
Poulton, Alex J.
Tyrrell, Toby
Lucas, Mike I.
author_sort Charalampopoulou, Anastasia
title Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean
title_short Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean
title_full Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean
title_fullStr Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean
title_sort irradiance and ph affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the north sea and the arctic ocean
publishDate 2011
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/193701/
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Norwegian Sea
Svalbard
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Norwegian Sea
Svalbard
genre Arctic
Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Global warming
Norwegian Sea
Ocean acidification
Svalbard
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Global warming
Norwegian Sea
Ocean acidification
Svalbard
op_relation Charalampopoulou, Anastasia, Poulton, Alex J., Tyrrell, Toby and Lucas, Mike I. (2011) Irradiance and pH affect coccolithophore community composition on a transect between the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 431, 25-43. (doi:10.3354/meps09140 <http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps09140>).
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3354/meps09140
container_title Marine Ecology Progress Series
container_volume 431
container_start_page 25
op_container_end_page 43
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