In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom

Particle aggregation and the consequent formation of marine snow alter important properties of biogenic particles(size, sinking rate, degradability), thus playing a key role in controlling the vertical flux of organic matterto the deep ocean. However, there are still large uncertainties about rates...

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Published in:Progress in Oceanography
Main Authors: Taucher, J, Stange, P, Alguero-Muniz, M, Bach, LT, Nauendorf, A, Kolzenburg, R, Budenbender, J, Riebesell, U
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.utas.edu.au/30961/
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spelling ftunivtasmania:oai:eprints.utas.edu.au:30961 2023-05-15T17:37:10+02:00 In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom Taucher, J Stange, P Alguero-Muniz, M Bach, LT Nauendorf, A Kolzenburg, R Budenbender, J Riebesell, U 2018 https://eprints.utas.edu.au/30961/ unknown Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd Taucher, J, Stange, P, Alguero-Muniz, M, Bach, LT orcid:0000-0003-0202-3671 , Nauendorf, A, Kolzenburg, R, Budenbender, J and Riebesell, U 2018 , 'In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom' , Progress in Oceanography, vol. 164 , pp. 75-88 , doi:10.1016/j.pocean.2018.01.004 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2018.01.004>. biological carbon pump export plankton marine snow aggregation Article PeerReviewed 2018 ftunivtasmania https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2018.01.004 2021-09-13T22:20:09Z Particle aggregation and the consequent formation of marine snow alter important properties of biogenic particles(size, sinking rate, degradability), thus playing a key role in controlling the vertical flux of organic matterto the deep ocean. However, there are still large uncertainties about rates and mechanisms of particle aggregation,as well as the role of plankton community structure in modifying biomass transfer from small particlesto large fast-sinking aggregates. Here we present data from a high-resolution underwater camera system that we used to observe particle sizedistributions and formation of marine snow (aggregates>0.5 mm) over the course of a 9-week in situ mesocosmexperiment in the Eastern Subtropical North Atlantic. After an oligotrophic phase of almost 4 weeks, addition ofnutrient-rich deep water (650 m) initiated the development of a pronounced diatom bloom and the subsequentformation of large marine snow aggregates in all 8 mesocosms. We observed a substantial time lag between thepeaks of chlorophyll a and marine snow biovolume of 9–12 days, which is much longer than previously reportedand indicates a marked temporal decoupling of phytoplankton growth and marine snow formation during ourstudy. Despite this time lag, our observations revealed substantial transfer of biomass from small particle sizes(single phytoplankton cells and chains) to marine snow aggregates of up to 2.5mm diameter (ESD), with most ofthe biovolume being contained in the 0.5–1mm size range. Notably, the abundance and community compositionof mesozooplankton had a substantial influence on the temporal development of particle size spectra and formationof marine snow aggregates: While higher copepod abundances were related to reduced aggregate formationand biomass transfer towards larger particle sizes, the presence of appendicularia and doliolids enhancedformation of large marine snow. Furthermore, we combined in situ particle size distributions with measurements of particle sinking velocity tocompute instantaneous (potential) vertical mass flux. However, somewhat surprisingly, we did not find a coherentrelationship between our computed flux and measured vertical mass flux (collected by sediment traps in15m depth). Although the onset of measured vertical flux roughly coincided with the emergence of marinesnow, we found substantial variability in mass flux among mesocosms that was not related to marine snownumbers, and was instead presumably driven by zooplankton-mediated alteration of sinking biomass and exportof small particles (fecal pellets). Altogether, our findings highlight the role of zooplankton community composition and feeding interactionson particle size spectra and formation of marine snow aggregates, with important implications for our understandingof particle aggregation and vertical flux of organic matter in the ocean. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints Progress in Oceanography 164 75 88
institution Open Polar
collection University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints
op_collection_id ftunivtasmania
language unknown
topic biological carbon pump
export
plankton
marine snow
aggregation
spellingShingle biological carbon pump
export
plankton
marine snow
aggregation
Taucher, J
Stange, P
Alguero-Muniz, M
Bach, LT
Nauendorf, A
Kolzenburg, R
Budenbender, J
Riebesell, U
In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom
topic_facet biological carbon pump
export
plankton
marine snow
aggregation
description Particle aggregation and the consequent formation of marine snow alter important properties of biogenic particles(size, sinking rate, degradability), thus playing a key role in controlling the vertical flux of organic matterto the deep ocean. However, there are still large uncertainties about rates and mechanisms of particle aggregation,as well as the role of plankton community structure in modifying biomass transfer from small particlesto large fast-sinking aggregates. Here we present data from a high-resolution underwater camera system that we used to observe particle sizedistributions and formation of marine snow (aggregates>0.5 mm) over the course of a 9-week in situ mesocosmexperiment in the Eastern Subtropical North Atlantic. After an oligotrophic phase of almost 4 weeks, addition ofnutrient-rich deep water (650 m) initiated the development of a pronounced diatom bloom and the subsequentformation of large marine snow aggregates in all 8 mesocosms. We observed a substantial time lag between thepeaks of chlorophyll a and marine snow biovolume of 9–12 days, which is much longer than previously reportedand indicates a marked temporal decoupling of phytoplankton growth and marine snow formation during ourstudy. Despite this time lag, our observations revealed substantial transfer of biomass from small particle sizes(single phytoplankton cells and chains) to marine snow aggregates of up to 2.5mm diameter (ESD), with most ofthe biovolume being contained in the 0.5–1mm size range. Notably, the abundance and community compositionof mesozooplankton had a substantial influence on the temporal development of particle size spectra and formationof marine snow aggregates: While higher copepod abundances were related to reduced aggregate formationand biomass transfer towards larger particle sizes, the presence of appendicularia and doliolids enhancedformation of large marine snow. Furthermore, we combined in situ particle size distributions with measurements of particle sinking velocity tocompute instantaneous (potential) vertical mass flux. However, somewhat surprisingly, we did not find a coherentrelationship between our computed flux and measured vertical mass flux (collected by sediment traps in15m depth). Although the onset of measured vertical flux roughly coincided with the emergence of marinesnow, we found substantial variability in mass flux among mesocosms that was not related to marine snownumbers, and was instead presumably driven by zooplankton-mediated alteration of sinking biomass and exportof small particles (fecal pellets). Altogether, our findings highlight the role of zooplankton community composition and feeding interactionson particle size spectra and formation of marine snow aggregates, with important implications for our understandingof particle aggregation and vertical flux of organic matter in the ocean.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Taucher, J
Stange, P
Alguero-Muniz, M
Bach, LT
Nauendorf, A
Kolzenburg, R
Budenbender, J
Riebesell, U
author_facet Taucher, J
Stange, P
Alguero-Muniz, M
Bach, LT
Nauendorf, A
Kolzenburg, R
Budenbender, J
Riebesell, U
author_sort Taucher, J
title In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom
title_short In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom
title_full In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom
title_fullStr In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom
title_full_unstemmed In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom
title_sort in situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom
publisher Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd
publishDate 2018
url https://eprints.utas.edu.au/30961/
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Taucher, J, Stange, P, Alguero-Muniz, M, Bach, LT orcid:0000-0003-0202-3671 , Nauendorf, A, Kolzenburg, R, Budenbender, J and Riebesell, U 2018 , 'In situ camera observations reveal major role of zooplankton in modulating marine snow formation during an upwelling-induced plankton bloom' , Progress in Oceanography, vol. 164 , pp. 75-88 , doi:10.1016/j.pocean.2018.01.004 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2018.01.004>.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2018.01.004
container_title Progress in Oceanography
container_volume 164
container_start_page 75
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