Phytoplankton rate processes in the oligotrophic waters of the central North Pacific Ocean |
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Authors: | Sharp, Jonathan H. Perry, M.J. Renger, Edward H. Eppley, Richard W. |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Marine Resources, A-018 Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093 1Present address: College of Marine Studies, University of Delaware Lewes, Delaware 19958 2Present address: Department of Oceanography, University of Washington Seattle Washington 98195 |
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Abstract: | The central North Pacific is one of the more oligotrophic regionsof the world oceans. There the particulate organic nitrogen:cabonratio of surface waters is variable and less than the Redfieldratio of 16N:106C by atoms. The phytoplankton P/B ratio basedupon both C and N assimilation rate varied directly with theparticulate matter PON:POC ratio as did the productivity index[mg C (mg chl a)1h1]. At steady state the doublingtime of the phytoplankton, the turnover time of the limitingnutrient supplied via herbivore grazing, and the time for herbivoresto filter a unit volume of water would be equivalent. They appearto be of the order of 59 days based on present methodologyand straightforward interpretation of its results. The rate measurements involved incubation of water samples forseveral hours in bottles. In the central N. Pacific the valueswere similar using bottles of different sizes. Addition of chelatorsdid not enhance the rates implying no poisoning of the planktonby heavy metal contaminants. The observed specific activitiesof 14C and 15N of the particulate matter in the rate measurementsare inconsistent with the notion of an active, rapidly growingand recycling microplankton food web within the incubation bottlesand support the idea that phytoplankton are growing slowly. |
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