Estimates of Phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the Southern Ocean
Phytoplankton is an important component of the oceanic carbon cycle, and deriving a good estimate of its carbon biomass (Cphyto) at ocean scale is difficult due to the lack of automatic sampling procedures. This is particularly difficult in the Southern Ocean, where winter conditions limit the sampl...
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ftunivcapetownir:oai:localhost:11427/15724 2023-05-15T13:46:03+02:00 Estimates of Phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the Southern Ocean Ogunkoya, Ayodele Gilbert Vichi, Marcello Thomalla, Sandy 2015 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15724 https://open.uct.ac.za/bitstream/11427/15724/1/thesis_sci_2015_ogunkoya_ayodele_gilbert.pdf eng eng University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15724 https://open.uct.ac.za/bitstream/11427/15724/1/thesis_sci_2015_ogunkoya_ayodele_gilbert.pdf Biological Sciences Marine Research Master Thesis Masters MSc 2015 ftunivcapetownir 2022-09-13T05:57:36Z Phytoplankton is an important component of the oceanic carbon cycle, and deriving a good estimate of its carbon biomass (Cphyto) at ocean scale is difficult due to the lack of automatic sampling procedures. This is particularly difficult in the Southern Ocean, where winter conditions limit the sampling. This study explored the opportunity of using a high resolution data from the glider tracks in the Sub-Antarctic Zone of the Southern Ocean. The data consisted of particulate backscattering and chlorophyll and four different methods of estimating phytoplankton carbon were used, three of them based on backscattering (named 30%POC, B05 and M13) and one on chlorophyll (S09). The methods are different in their empirical formulations and source of original data. Three methods showed similar results despite the fact that one of them makes use of chlorophyll to derive Cphyto. Method M13 doubles that of the 3 other methods (~80mg C m-³ vs 40-50 mg C m-³). It was observed that discrepancy between M13 and the other 3 methods decreases with depth and when biomass was low (~0.25 mg Chl-a m-³) e.g., at depth 80 m. Investigating the drivers of variability in chl-a:C phyto ratios with depth and MLD shows little response and highlighted the need for more research in this region. Although M13 has a very low chl-a:Cphyto ratios, the range of variability was similar to that of the 30%POC and B05 methods and likely driven by variability in light and Fe limitation and changes in community structure. Despite a similar magnitude, the S09 method show a tight constrain in chl-a:Cphyto ratios that were methodologically driven and thus less sensitive to physiological adjustments in cellular chl-a:Cphyto ratios. The analysis also confirms that each oceanic region has factors that drive their variability and care needs to be taken when applying a method that was derived from one oceanic region to another. Master Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Southern Ocean University of Cape Town: OpenUCT Antarctic Southern Ocean |
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Open Polar |
collection |
University of Cape Town: OpenUCT |
op_collection_id |
ftunivcapetownir |
language |
English |
topic |
Biological Sciences Marine Research |
spellingShingle |
Biological Sciences Marine Research Ogunkoya, Ayodele Gilbert Estimates of Phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the Southern Ocean |
topic_facet |
Biological Sciences Marine Research |
description |
Phytoplankton is an important component of the oceanic carbon cycle, and deriving a good estimate of its carbon biomass (Cphyto) at ocean scale is difficult due to the lack of automatic sampling procedures. This is particularly difficult in the Southern Ocean, where winter conditions limit the sampling. This study explored the opportunity of using a high resolution data from the glider tracks in the Sub-Antarctic Zone of the Southern Ocean. The data consisted of particulate backscattering and chlorophyll and four different methods of estimating phytoplankton carbon were used, three of them based on backscattering (named 30%POC, B05 and M13) and one on chlorophyll (S09). The methods are different in their empirical formulations and source of original data. Three methods showed similar results despite the fact that one of them makes use of chlorophyll to derive Cphyto. Method M13 doubles that of the 3 other methods (~80mg C m-³ vs 40-50 mg C m-³). It was observed that discrepancy between M13 and the other 3 methods decreases with depth and when biomass was low (~0.25 mg Chl-a m-³) e.g., at depth 80 m. Investigating the drivers of variability in chl-a:C phyto ratios with depth and MLD shows little response and highlighted the need for more research in this region. Although M13 has a very low chl-a:Cphyto ratios, the range of variability was similar to that of the 30%POC and B05 methods and likely driven by variability in light and Fe limitation and changes in community structure. Despite a similar magnitude, the S09 method show a tight constrain in chl-a:Cphyto ratios that were methodologically driven and thus less sensitive to physiological adjustments in cellular chl-a:Cphyto ratios. The analysis also confirms that each oceanic region has factors that drive their variability and care needs to be taken when applying a method that was derived from one oceanic region to another. |
author2 |
Vichi, Marcello Thomalla, Sandy |
format |
Master Thesis |
author |
Ogunkoya, Ayodele Gilbert |
author_facet |
Ogunkoya, Ayodele Gilbert |
author_sort |
Ogunkoya, Ayodele Gilbert |
title |
Estimates of Phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the Southern Ocean |
title_short |
Estimates of Phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the Southern Ocean |
title_full |
Estimates of Phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the Southern Ocean |
title_fullStr |
Estimates of Phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the Southern Ocean |
title_full_unstemmed |
Estimates of Phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the Southern Ocean |
title_sort |
estimates of phytoplankton carbon from high resolution optical sensors in the southern ocean |
publisher |
University of Cape Town |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15724 https://open.uct.ac.za/bitstream/11427/15724/1/thesis_sci_2015_ogunkoya_ayodele_gilbert.pdf |
geographic |
Antarctic Southern Ocean |
geographic_facet |
Antarctic Southern Ocean |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctic Southern Ocean |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctic Southern Ocean |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15724 https://open.uct.ac.za/bitstream/11427/15724/1/thesis_sci_2015_ogunkoya_ayodele_gilbert.pdf |
_version_ |
1766235371802198016 |