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A review of data on production and import of organic carbon in the western Wadden Sea
Authors:C C Cadee
Institution:(1) Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, P.O. Box 59, Texel, the Netherlands
Abstract:Summary Annual phytoplankton primary production in the tidal channels of the western Wadden Sea cannot be estimated more precisely than 150±50 g C.m–2a–1, due to large spatial and short-term temporal variations. This implies that year-to-year variations and eventually long-term trends have to be very pronounced to be measurable even with a weekly sampling program.Short-term temporal variation in primary production of microphytobenthos living on the tidal flats is less pronounced, but spatial variation is large. Primary production on high tidal flats is larger than on flats lower in the tidal zone. Year-to-year variation on a tidal flat station occupied now for 12 years was large. This variation cannot be explained by year-to-year variations in nutrients, light or temperature, but probably by year-to-year variations in grazing. Macrophytobenthic primary production plays a subordinate role in the western Wadden Sea after the disappearance ofZostera fields. It is difficult to give one figure for the annual primary production of an lsquoaveragersquo tidal flat due to the variations mentioned. Tentatively, microphytobenthic plus macrophytobenthic plus phytoplankton primary production on and above an average tidal flat is estimated at 150±50 g C.m–2a–1,i.e. the same as estimated for phytoplankton primary production in the tidal channels.The western Wadden Sea receives a considerable amount of particulate organic carbon from outside the area, estimated at 240 g C.m–2a–1. Formerly the North Sea was thought to be the only source. New data indicate also an import from the Ysselmeer. The import of total organic carbon, particulate plus dissolved, from the Ysselmeer exceedsin situ primary production. From this import Ysselmeer DOC is probably not used very much in the Wadden Sea. However, Ysselmeer POC, consisting for 50% on average of living phytoplankton cells, may form a suitable food source for Wadden Sea invertebrates. Cell counts ofScenedesmus sp., a freshwater alga used as a natural tracer for Ysselmeer POC in the western Wadden Sea, indicate that a large part of the Ysselmeer POC is retained here.
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