ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND GRAZING MORTALITY

In an effort to better understand what factors govern phytoplankton growth (μ, d-1) and mortality due to herbivorous protist grazing (g, d-1) in different biogeographic regions of the oceans, I analyzed data from 401 dilution experiments performed over a decade by the Menden-Deuer laboratory. Measur...

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Main Author: Cote, Mikayla
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@URI 2021
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/theses/1967
https://doi.org/10.23860/thesis-cote-mikayla-2021
https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/theses/article/2938/viewcontent/Cote_uri_0186M_12633.pdf
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spelling ftunivrhodeislan:oai:digitalcommons.uri.edu:theses-2938 2023-07-30T03:57:14+02:00 ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND GRAZING MORTALITY Cote, Mikayla 2021-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/theses/1967 https://doi.org/10.23860/thesis-cote-mikayla-2021 https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/theses/article/2938/viewcontent/Cote_uri_0186M_12633.pdf unknown DigitalCommons@URI https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/theses/1967 doi:10.23860/thesis-cote-mikayla-2021 https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/theses/article/2938/viewcontent/Cote_uri_0186M_12633.pdf Open Access Master's Theses text 2021 ftunivrhodeislan https://doi.org/10.23860/thesis-cote-mikayla-2021 2023-07-17T19:01:49Z In an effort to better understand what factors govern phytoplankton growth (μ, d-1) and mortality due to herbivorous protist grazing (g, d-1) in different biogeographic regions of the oceans, I analyzed data from 401 dilution experiments performed over a decade by the Menden-Deuer laboratory. Measurements were made in the North Atlantic, North Pacific, West Antarctic, Narragansett Bay, and along the Northeast U.S. Shelf. Experiments were performed over temperatures that ranged from -1.5 to 27.4 °C, salinity from 14.1 to 36.5, photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) from 0.24 to 60.0 mol/m2.s chlorophyll a (chl a) concentration from 0.03 to 2.43 μg/L, and sampling depths from surface to 80 m. Growth rates (μ, d-1) ranged from -0.61 to 2.43 d-1 and grazing rates ranged (g, d-1) from 0 to 1.81 d-1. On average, 61% of primary production was grazed (0-550%). Growth and grazing rates were positively correlated with both temperature and light availability, suggesting these environmental variables as important drivers that may be used as predictors of growth and grazing rates to better understand the global impacts of microzooplankton grazing. Improved knowledge of the impacts of grazing is important in accurately predicting carbon flow through ecologically diverse marine food webs. Text Antarc* Antarctic North Atlantic University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI Antarctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI
op_collection_id ftunivrhodeislan
language unknown
description In an effort to better understand what factors govern phytoplankton growth (μ, d-1) and mortality due to herbivorous protist grazing (g, d-1) in different biogeographic regions of the oceans, I analyzed data from 401 dilution experiments performed over a decade by the Menden-Deuer laboratory. Measurements were made in the North Atlantic, North Pacific, West Antarctic, Narragansett Bay, and along the Northeast U.S. Shelf. Experiments were performed over temperatures that ranged from -1.5 to 27.4 °C, salinity from 14.1 to 36.5, photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) from 0.24 to 60.0 mol/m2.s chlorophyll a (chl a) concentration from 0.03 to 2.43 μg/L, and sampling depths from surface to 80 m. Growth rates (μ, d-1) ranged from -0.61 to 2.43 d-1 and grazing rates ranged (g, d-1) from 0 to 1.81 d-1. On average, 61% of primary production was grazed (0-550%). Growth and grazing rates were positively correlated with both temperature and light availability, suggesting these environmental variables as important drivers that may be used as predictors of growth and grazing rates to better understand the global impacts of microzooplankton grazing. Improved knowledge of the impacts of grazing is important in accurately predicting carbon flow through ecologically diverse marine food webs.
format Text
author Cote, Mikayla
spellingShingle Cote, Mikayla
ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND GRAZING MORTALITY
author_facet Cote, Mikayla
author_sort Cote, Mikayla
title ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND GRAZING MORTALITY
title_short ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND GRAZING MORTALITY
title_full ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND GRAZING MORTALITY
title_fullStr ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND GRAZING MORTALITY
title_full_unstemmed ENVIRONMENTAL DRIVERS OF PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH AND GRAZING MORTALITY
title_sort environmental drivers of phytoplankton growth and grazing mortality
publisher DigitalCommons@URI
publishDate 2021
url https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/theses/1967
https://doi.org/10.23860/thesis-cote-mikayla-2021
https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/theses/article/2938/viewcontent/Cote_uri_0186M_12633.pdf
geographic Antarctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Antarctic
Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
North Atlantic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
North Atlantic
op_source Open Access Master's Theses
op_relation https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/theses/1967
doi:10.23860/thesis-cote-mikayla-2021
https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/context/theses/article/2938/viewcontent/Cote_uri_0186M_12633.pdf
op_doi https://doi.org/10.23860/thesis-cote-mikayla-2021
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