RESUMEN
Browning and nutrient inputs from extreme rainfall, together with increased vertical mixing due to strong winds, are more frequent in coastal ecosystems; however, their interactive effects on phytoplankton are poorly understood. We conducted experiments to quantify how browning, together with different mixing speeds (fluctuating radiation), and a nutrient pulse alter primary productivity and photosynthetic efficiency in estuarine phytoplankton communities. Phytoplankton communities (grazers excluded) were exposed simultaneously to these drivers, and key photosynthetic targets were quantified: oxygen production, electron transport rates (ETRs), and carbon fixation immediately following collection and after a 2-d acclimation/adaptation period. Increasing mixing speeds in a turbid water column (e.g. browning) significantly decreased ETRs and carbon fixation in the short term. Acclimation/adaptation to this condition for 2 d resulted in an increase in nanoplanktonic diatoms and a community that was photosynthetically more efficient; however, this did not revert the decreasing trend in carbon fixation with increased mixing speed. The observed interactive effects (resulting from extreme rainfall and strong winds) may have profound implications in the trophodynamics of highly productive system such as the Southwest Atlantic Ocean due to changes in the size structure of the community and reduced productivity.
Asunto(s)
Diatomeas , Fitoplancton , Ecosistema , Viento , Fotosíntesis/efectos de la radiaciónRESUMEN
Rainfall events bring both, terrigenous materials (including DOM) and nutrients to the aquatic system (e.g., via riverine runoff) having potential effects on the structure and metabolism of the phytoplankton communities. As extreme rainfall events in Patagonia occurred more frequently in the last decade (2010-2019) as compared to the previous ones (1972-2009), we exposed winter and summer phytoplankton communities (using microcosms) to solar radiation, simulating two rainfall conditions - a single extreme vs. intermittent i.e., with gradual inputs, and we assessed their photosynthetic and growth rates responses and taxonomic changes. Rainfall scenarios significantly increased growth of both communities, mainly of small nanoplanktonic species, as compared to the control. Small nanoplanktonic centric diatoms increased and dominated in both rainfall scenarios, as compared to the control, during winter and summer, with significantly smaller cells during summer as compared to winter. Photosynthetic efficiency increased in both rainfall scenarios at the end of the experiment as compared to the control. Overall, the change towards small cells (associated to rainfall events) that can use more effectively solar radiation and nutrients (as compared to large cells) may have a significant impact on the trophic webs of the South West Atlantic Ocean by favoring grazing pressure by microzooplankton, especially during summer.
Asunto(s)
Diatomeas , Fitoplancton , Argentina , Océano Atlántico , Estaciones del AñoRESUMEN
Coastal waters of the South Atlantic Ocean (SAO) sustain one of the highest levels of production of the World's ocean, maintained by dense phytoplankton winter blooms that are dominated by large diatoms. These blooms have been associated to calm weather conditions that allow the formation of a shallow and well illuminated upper mixed layer. In Bahía Engaño, a coastal site in Patagonia, Argentina (chosen as a model coastal ecosystem) winter blooms recurrently peaked on June and they were dominated almost entirely by the microplanktonic diatom Odontella aurita. However, during the year 2015, a new wind pattern was observed - with many days of northerly high-speed winds, deviating from the calm winter days observed during a reference period (2001-2014) used for comparison. We determined that this new wind pattern was the most important factor that affected the phytoplankton dynamics, precluding the initiation of a June bloom during 2015 that instead occurred during late winter (August). Furthermore, the 2015 bloom had a higher proportion of nanoplanktonic cells (as compared to the reference period) and it was co-dominated by O. aurita and Thalassiossira spp. Other variables such as nutrient supply and incident solar radiation did not have an important role in limiting and/or initiating the June 2015 bloom, but temperature might have benefited the growth of small cells during August 2015. If these changes in the timing and/or the taxonomic composition of the bloom persist, they may have important consequences for the secondary production and economic services of the coastal SAO.