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1.
Living calcareous nannoplankton in the region between Australia and Antarctica are distributed in five assemblages associated with distinct physico-chemical properties of surface and subsurface water masses. Temperature and salinity ranges for living assemblages were 2–15.7°C and 33.7–35.56‰, respectively, with maximum cell densities for austral summer 1994 found at 9.63°C and 34.44‰, and for austral summer 1995 at 12.8°C and 35.17‰. Nutrients (phosphate, silicate and nitrate) increase poleward and vertically from surface to depth. Abundance and diversity of calcareous nannoplankton decrease in a poleward direction with major shifts located across both the Subtropical and the Subantarctic Fronts. Higher cell densities were found below 50 m equatorward of the Subtropical Front and above 50 m poleward of this front. Poleward of the Antarctic Divergence coccolithophores are absent from all samples. Three different morphotypes of Emiliania huxleyi were identified, one of which has a distribution associated with the Subtropical Front. Of the subordinate species Syracosphaera spp, Calciosolenia murrayi and Umbellosphaera tenuis dominate equatorward of the Subtropical Front with Syracosphaera spp and Calcidiscus leptoporus dominant poleward of this front. A peculiar community of weakly calcified species is recorded for the first time outside the Weddell Sea.  相似文献   

2.
The present study was initiated to ascertain the significance of coccolithophores as a proxy for paleoceanographic and paleoproductivity studies in the equatorial Atlantic. Data from a range of different samples, from the plankton, surface sediments as well as sediment cores are shown and compared with each other.In general, the living coccolithophores in the surface and subsurface waters show considerable variation in cell numbers and distribution patterns. Cell densities reached a maximum of up to 300×103 coccospheres/l in the upwelling area of the equatorial Atlantic. Here, Emiliania huxleyi is the dominant species with relatively high cell numbers, whereas Umbellosphaera irregularis and Umbellosphaera tenuis are characteristic for oligotrophic surface waters. Although they are observed in high relative abundances, these species only occur in low absolute numbers. The lower photic zone is dominated by high abundances and considerable cell numbers of Florisphaera profunda.The geographical distribution pattern of coccoliths in surface sediments reflects the conditions of the overlying surface water masses. However, abundances of the oligotrophic species Umbellosphaera irregularis and Umbellosphaera tenuis are strongly diminished, causing an increase in relative abundance of the lower photic zone taxa Florisphaera profunda and Gladiolithus flabellatus.During the past 140,000 years the surface water circulation of the equatorial Atlantic has changed drastically, as can be seen from changes in the coccolithophore species composition, absolute coccolith numbers, as well as coccolith accumulation rates. Significant increases in coccolith numbers and accumulation rates is observed in the southern equatorial Atlantic during the last glacial interval (oxygen isotope stages 2–4), which we attribute to enhanced upwelling intensities and advection of cool nutrient rich waters at this site. In the western equatorial Atlantic we observe an opposite trend with decreasing numbers of coccoliths during glacial periods, which probably is caused by a deepening of the thermocline.  相似文献   

3.
《Marine Micropaleontology》2006,58(3):184-206
The ecological preferences of morphological groups within major coccolithophore taxa were studied in surface water samples from the equatorial and subequatorial Pacific Ocean. Emiliania huxleyi was subdivided into three morphological groups: Type A, Type C, and variety corona. The most probable factors limiting the occurrence of E. huxleyi Types A and C were high temperatures and low nutrient concentrations, respectively. E. huxleyi var. corona had an affinity for oligotrophic conditions. Calcidiscus leptoporus ssp. small was adapted to fertile waters. Umbilicosphaera foliosa and Umbilicosphaera sibogae preferred mesotrophic upwelling waters and stratified marginal waters surrounding the upwelling front, respectively. Among the three Umbellosphaera tenuis morphotypes observed in this study (Types I, III, and IV), only Type I was found in very warm tropical surface. Both Types III and IV were found in subtropical waters, and Type III differed from Type IV in that its distribution was constrained to hemi-pelagic waters. Habitat segregation among the morphotypes of major taxa indicates that the observed global distributions of these major taxa are, in fact, combinations of discrete morphological groups.  相似文献   

4.
The spatial distribution of living coccolithophores was studied in the Western-Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean during November–December, 1990 and September–October, 1992. The highest local concentration of coccolithophores occurred at the thermocline in well-stratified waters, but at sea-surface level in dynamic waters. In total, 111 coccolithophore taxa were recognized, some of which exhibited hydrographically controlled variation in their absolute abundance. Gephyrocapsa oceanica and Oolithotus antillarum were abundant in the upwelling front. Most of the lower photic dwellers were abundant in the tropical to subtropical stations regardless of the water stratification. The coccolithophore flora of well-stratified waters could be distinguished from the upwelling front flora by the higher abundance of Umbellosphaera irregularis and lower abundance of G. oceanica. The temperature mixed-water flora was characterized by a high abundance of Emiliania huxleyi. The vertical distribution of all coccolithophore taxa, except three placolith-bearing species, Gephyrocapsa ericsonii, G. oceanica and E. huxleyi, was controlled by upper photic-zone temperature and water stratification. The upper or lower vertical distribution limits of many coccolithophore taxa coincided with the top of the thermocline. The most common 27 taxa were grouped into four ecological groups, Upper Photic-zone Group (UPG), Middle Photic-zone Group (MPG), Lower Photic-zone Group (LPG) and Omnipresent Group (OPG), on the basis of their vertical distribution. By analyzing the hydrographic control on the vertical distribution of these four ecological groups, four ecological assemblages were recognized: High Temperature; Warm Oligotrophic; Warm Eutrophic; and Temperate Mixed-water Assemblages. In equatorial waters, the total coccolithophore assemblage across the photic-zone was controlled by the population in the upper photic-zone. The UPG monopolized the upper photic-zone flora in the High Temperature Assemblage. In the Warn Oligotrophic-water Assemblage, common OPG accompanied abundant UPG in the upper photic-zone. The upper photic-zone of the Warm Eutrophic Assemblage consisted of UPG, MPG and OPG.Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica, the major component of OPG, displayed intra-specific morphological variations. G. oceanica Type 1 was restricted to the upper photic-zone of well-stratified oligotrophic waters. Conversely, in these waters E. huxleyi Type C and G. oceanica Type 2 only occurred below the thermocline. These two taxa also coexist with G. oceanica Type 3 and E. huxleyi Type A in the upper photic zone of dynamic waters.  相似文献   

5.
Calcareous nannoplankton assemblages from a Late Quaternary deep-sea core (GC07; 46°09′S, 146°17′E) south of Australia provide information on regional palaeoceanography and palaeoclimate changes in the Southern Ocean, in particular the movement of the Subtropical Front for the past 130 ka years. Marine Isotope Stages 1–5 are identified through changes in calcareous nannoplankton assemblages, supported by 14C dates, and oxygen isotope and %CaCO data.Two distinct assemblages are recognised: a warm water assemblage with higher abundances of Calcidiscus leptoporus, Emiliania huxleyi, Helicosphaera.carteri, Syracosphaera pulchra, Gephyrocapsa caribbeanica and Gephyrocapsa oceanica; and, a cold water assemblage with higher abundances of Gephyrocapsa muellerae and Coccolithus pelagicus. Alternation between these two assemblages downcore in GC07 reflect movement of the Subtropical Front across the location and can be correlated to Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 1–5. Sediments with a cold water assemblage indicate the position of the Subtropical Front equatorward of the site when transitional to sub-antarctic waters were overlying the site. Conversely sediments with a warm water assemblage indicate the Subtropical Front was poleward of GC07 when warmer, subtropical waters were over the site. MIS 1 and 5 are interpreted as warmer than MIS 3 (based on species composition) with the Subtropical Front more poleward than for MIS 3. During MIS 3 the Subtropical Front is interpreted as adjacent to or immediately poleward of GC07. Some species including C. leptoporus and C. pelagicus show negative covariance and are considered to be reliable species in identifying glacial and interglacial intervals in this region.Comparison with established biostratigraphy based on calcareous nannoplankton showed the datum event for the reversal between E. huxleyi and G. muellerae of 73 ka in transitional waters is not applicable in this region. The reversal between these two species occurs between 48 and 30 cm downcore in GC07 with a 14C date of 11 020 year BP at 49–48 cm, i.e. the reversal event is younger than this date.  相似文献   

6.
Calcidiscus leptoporus is a cosmopolitan coccolithophore species, composed of three morphotypes characterised by differences in morphology and size. The seasonal dynamics of this species have been studied in four sediment trap and plankton time series covering different biogeographic settings. Investigated parameters were: variations in absolute and relative abundances of the three morphotypes, average size variations of the C. leptoporus assemblages, and intra-morphotype size variations. For each time series, and for the complete data set, the relationship between C. leptoporus dynamics and some environmental parameters was investigated. Seasonal variations can be recognised in the four time series, but the biogeographic pattern governing this seasonality is complex. The two best documented morphotypes show comparable seasonal fluctuations in absolute abundances, mainly co-varying with temperature and related factors such as water mixing. However, their relative abundances change with varying nutrient contents in the surface water masses, suggesting slight differences in their respective ecological preferences. Average size of the C. leptoporus assemblage provides information about the morphotype composition and allows a comparison of the seasonal variations observed in the present study and Holocene geographic patterns reported in the literature. Additionally, intra-morphotype size variations might be related to environmental changes.  相似文献   

7.
The response of Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) W. W. Hay et H. Mohler, Calcidiscus leptoporus (G. Murray et V. H. Blackman) J. Schiller, and Syracosphaera pulchra Lohmann to elevated partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2) was investigated in batch cultures. We reported on the response of both haploid and diploid life stages of these three species. Growth rate, cell size, particulate inorganic carbon (PIC), and particulate organic carbon (POC) of both life stages were measured at two different pCO2 (400 and 760 parts per million [ppm]), and their organic and inorganic carbon production were calculated. The two life stages within the same species generally exhibited a similar response to elevated pCO2, the response of the haploid stage being often more pronounced than that of the diploid stage. The growth rate was consistently higher at elevated pCO2, but the response of other processes varied among species. Calcification rate of C. leptoporus and of S. pulchra did not change at elevated pCO2, whereas it increased in E. huxleyi. POC production and cell size of both life stages of S. pulchra and of the haploid stage of E. huxleyi markedly decreased at elevated pCO2. It remained unaltered in the diploid stage of E. huxleyi and C. leptoporus and increased in the haploid stage of the latter. The PIC:POC ratio increased in E. huxleyi and was constant in C. leptoporus and S. pulchra. Elevated pCO2 has a significant effect on these three coccolithophore species, the haploid stage being more sensitive. This effect must be taken into account when predicting the fate of coccolithophores in the future ocean.  相似文献   

8.
Preservation of calcareous nannoplankton in surface sediment samples from the Southern Ocean south of Australia and adjacent to New Zealand record a single assemblage. The dominant species are Emiliania huxleyi, Gephyrocapsa muellerae, Calcidiscus leptoporus, Helicosphaera carteri and Coccolithus pelagicus. The assemblage varies little in abundance and diversity with minor correlation to present-day overlying surface water masses and oceanic fronts. Increase in abundance of H. carteri and C. pelagicus in the region of the Subtropical Front may reflect higher nutrients associated with this front. The assemblage, although altered by dissolution, represents a warmer climatic interval than present-day with the presence of preferentially dissolved, warm-water species preserved as far south as the Polar Front. The presence of warm-water species under sub-Antarctic waters at the Polar Front is interpreted as a relic population from the Holocene climatic optimum of 10–8 ka. The absence of coccoliths in sediments poleward of the Polar Front suggests an equatorward shift of this front following the climatic optimum, resulting in increased productivity of siliceous phytoplankton associated with the colder waters and increased dissolution of coccoliths. Movement of the Subtropical Front for the same interval is not recorded in the preserved coccoliths. The more heavily calcified form of E. huxleyi which dominates the living assemblage north of the Subtropical Front is subject to dissolution in this region and is poorly preserved in the sediment assemblage.  相似文献   

9.
Six moorings were deployed at different locations in the deep submarine canyons along the south–west margin of Crete, providing a total of eight sediment-trap time series from June 2005 to May 2006. Within this dataset, we analyzed the record from intact coccospheres, which represent the signal of export production from the coccolithophore community. The most abundant species at all stations during the whole investigated period were E. huxleyi and A. robusta, followed by S. pulchra HET, G. flabellatus, H. carteri, F. profunda, S. pulchra HOL oblonga, while the rest of the species represented ≤ 1% of the assemblage. Overall the assemblage composition was comparable at all stations, with slight variations mostly related to the different preservation of coccosphere integrity at the different collection depths. The consistent pattern of seasonal variation in species distribution and total coccolithophore export allowed us to define the occurrence of three main periods: a) March to June, with high overall coccosphere flux (up to 4.3 × 105–3.4 × 106 coccospheres m− 2 day− 1), increased abundance of E. huxleyi and subordinate H. carteri s.s., Umbilicosphaera spp. and S. pulchra; b) June to November, with high but gradually decreasing total coccosphere flux (up to 7 × 105–1.4 × 106 coccospheres m− 2 day− 1) and high relative abundance of the deep photic zone species A. robusta, F. profunda, G. flabellatus as well as S. pulchra and Coronosphaera spp., R. clavigera, U. tenuis, D. tubifera and holococcolithophores; c) November to February, with low overall export fluxes (3.5–9 × 104 coccospheres m− 2 day− 1) and high relative abundance of A. robusta, S. pulchra and Syracosphaera spp. These three periods correspond to the seasonal changes in sea surface temperature, surface mixed layer depth and rainfall and are associated with varying total surface primary production, as detected through remote sensing in the surface waters.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Compositions and abundances of calcareous nannofossil taxa have been determined in a ca 170 kyrs long time interval across the Paleocene/Eocene boundary at 1-cm to 10-cm resolution from two ODP Sites (1262, 1263) drilled along the flank of the Walvis Ridge in the South Atlantic. The results are compared to published data from ODP Site 690 in the Weddell Sea. The assemblages underwent rapid evolution over a 74 kyrs period, indicating stressed, unstable and/or extreme photic zone environments during the PETM hyperthermal. This rapid evolution, which created 5 distinct stratigraphic horizons, is consistent with the restricted brief occurrences of malformed and/or weakly calcified morphotypes. The production of these aberrant morphotypes is possibly caused by major global scale changes in carbon cycling in the ocean–atmosphere system, affecting also photic zone environments. No marked paleoecologically induced changes are observed in abundances of the genera Discoaster, Fasciculithus and Sphenolithus at the Walvis Ridge sites. Surprisingly, there is no significant correlation in abundance between these three genera, presumed to have had a similar paleoecological preference for warm and oligotrophic conditions.  相似文献   

12.
A high-resolution history of paleoceanographic changes in the subpolar waters of the southern margin of the Subtropical Convergence Zone during the last 130 kyr, is present in foraminiferal assemblages of DSDP Site 594. The foraminifera indicate that sea-surface temperatures during the Last Interglacial Climax were warmer than today, and that between substage 5d through to the end of isotope stage 2, temperatures were mostly cooler than Holocene temperatures. The paleotemperatures suggest that (1) the Subtropical Convergence was located over the site during substage 5e, later moving further north, then moving southwards to near the site during the Holocene, and (2) the Polar Front was positioned over the Site during glacial stages 6, 4, 2 and possibly parts of stage 3. Several major events are indicated by the nannofloral assemblages during these large changes in sea-surface temperature and associated reorganization of ocean circulation. First, the time-progressive trends between E. huxleyi and medium to large Gephyrocapsa are unique to this site, with E. huxleyi dominating over medium Gephyrocapsa during stages 5c-a, middle part of stage 4 and after the middle point of stage 3. This unusual trend may (at least partly) be caused by the shift of the Polar Front across the site. Second, upwelling flora (E. huxleyi and small placoliths) increase in abundance during stages 1, 3 and 5, suggesting that upwelling or disturbance of water stratification took place during the interglacials. Thirdly, there are no significant differences between the distribution patterns of the various morphotypes of medium to large Gephyrocapsa, and the combined value of all medium Gephyrocapsa increases in abundance during glacials (stages 2 and 4 and the end of stage 6), similar to the abundance trends in benthic foraminifera. Finally, subordinate nannofossil taxa also show distinctive. climatic trends during the last glacial cycle: (1) Syracosphaera spp. are present in increased abundance during warmer extremes in climate (substages 5e, 5a, and stage 1); (2) Coccolithus pelagicus and Calcidiscus leptoporus dominate the subordinate nannofossil taxa, and their relative proportions seem to provide a useful paleoceanographic index, with C. pelagicus dominating when the Polar Front Zone is over the site (stages 6, 4 and 2), whilst C. leptoporus is relatively more abundant when the STC is positioned over the site (stages 1 and 5e). Increased abundance of C. pelagicus also can indicate intensified coastal upwelling.  相似文献   

13.
Coccolithophores are the most abundant calcifying organisms in modern oceans and are important primary producers in many marine ecosystems. Their ability to generate a cellular covering of calcium carbonate plates (coccoliths) plays a major role in marine biogeochemistry and the global carbon cycle. Coccolithophores also play an important role in sulfur cycling through the production of the climate-active gas dimethyl sulfide. The primary model organism for coccolithophore research is Emiliania huxleyi, now named Gephyrocapsa huxleyi. G. huxleyi has a cosmopolitan distribution, occupying coastal and oceanic environments across the globe, and is the most abundant coccolithophore in modern oceans. Research in G. huxleyi has identified many aspects of coccolithophore biology, from cell biology to ecological interactions. In this perspective, we summarize the key advances made using G. huxleyi and examine the emerging tools for research in this model organism. We discuss the key steps that need to be taken by the research community to advance G. huxleyi as a model organism and the suitability of other species as models for specific aspects of coccolithophore biology.  相似文献   

14.
A high-resolution biostratigraphic analysis of planktic foraminifers confirms that the Bidart section at the eastern margin of the Atlantic Ocean exhibits a continuous and complete Cretaceous/Paleogene (K/Pg) transition interval. The biozones and subzones recorded in this section are less expanded than their equivalent in Tunisian sections: El Kef (Global Stratotype Section and Point: GSSP for the K/Pg boundary) and Ellès (auxiliary section), but they are sufficiently thick to allow a detailed analysis of the evolution of the planktic foraminiferal assemblages across the K/Pg transition.Throughout the uppermost 4 m Maastrichtian, the planktic foraminiferal assemblages are highly diversified, containing up to 72 species. These Maastrichtian assemblages are rich in cosmopolitan taxa (70%), dominated by small biserial morphotypes which belong mainly to the genus Heterohelix which coexist with less abundant but highly diverse tropical and subtropical species.The extinction pattern at the Bidart section suggests a sudden catastrophic mass extinction at the K/Pg boundary which affected at least 53 out of 72 species. The species becoming extinct include globotruncanids (e.g. Contusotruncana spp., Globotruncana spp., Globotruncanita spp.) and complex heterohelicids (e.g. Racemiguembelina spp., Pseudotextularia spp., Gublerina spp.). At the Bidart section, only Archaeoglobigerina cretacea disappears 2 m below the K/Pg boundary event. Specimens of 18 small and even tiny Maastrichtian species, are found at the lowermost Danian. Only a few of these species belonging to the genera of Guembelitria, Hedbergella and Heterohelix are considered to be real “Cretaceous survivor species”, whereas the specimens belonging to the rest, are most probably reworked, because they differ in their preservation.Throughout lowermost Danian, the planktic foraminiferal assemblages are dominated by “opportunistic” species of the genus Guembelitria. These opportunists are associated to small and poorly diversified pioneer globigerinids (Palaeoglobigerina spp. and Parvularugoglobigerina spp.). These assemblages became progressively more diversified across the early Danian containing species with cancellate walls (Eoglobigerina spp., Parasubbotina spp., Subbotina triloculinoides and Praemurica spp.) and new taxa of biserial heterohelicids (Woodringina spp. and Chiloguembelina spp.) suggesting a paleoenvironmental recovery.  相似文献   

15.
The distribution of living coccolithophores in the California Current system of southern California at 10 m water depth was investigated on two dates in March and June, 1982. Six closely spaced stations were sampled in March, of which three were resampled in June. Thirty-six euphotic species were identified of which four,Emiliania huxleyi, Umbilicosphaera sibogae, Gephyrocapsa oceanica, andRhabdosphaera longistylis, respectively, were the most abundant. Both the “cold” and “warm” morphotypes ofE. huxleyi were present, in varying proportions. Large ranges in community structure, diversity (0.35–2.64 natural bels), and standing crop (1.0 × 104–6.2 × 105cells/l) were recorded. This range of end-member values is approximately that found in the open ocean from 0° to about 65° latitude.The distributions of four coccolithophore assemblages recognized in March samples from the Borderland area appear to reflect the following distinct water masses: (1) California Current; (2) Southern California Counter Current; (3) Transitional Zone; (4) Near Shore. The coccolithophore assemblages from the June stations were more uniform, indicating that the Borderland was experiencing more stable conditions than in March.  相似文献   

16.
The distribution of forty-four coccolithophore species in one hundred deep-sea core-tops from the southwest Indian Ocean is described. Three coccolith assemblages have been recognised (Maputo, Agulhas Current and deep water) by the relative abundances of four ecologically significant coccolithophore species (Gephyrocapsa oceanica, Emiliania huxleyi, Calcidiscus leptoporus and Umbilicosphaera sibogae). Their biogeographical distribution appears to be related to water temperature, nutrient concentration and dissolution.The degree of preservation of coccoliths and foraminifera indicates that the carbonate lysocline lies somewhere between 3500 and 4000 m, resulting in the concentration of dissolution-resistant microfossils below this depth.Stable oxygen isotope ratios of the planktonic foraminiferal species Globigerinoides sacculifer range between −1.5 to −1.0‰ PDB (equal to 22.8–25.1°C) and occur in a narrow band on the sea floor beneath the “A” route of the Agulhas Current.These values are about 0.5 per mil PDB lighter than samples analyzed on either side of this band and can be explained by the Agulhas Current's elevated temperature at the ocean surface of 2–3°C. Thus an oxygen isotope imprint of the Agulhas Current exists beneath it on the sea floor.The Agulhas Current is probably the major factor influencing sedimentation, sediment-distribution patterns and geological features in the study area. At present it is voluminous and fast flowing, possibly eroding sediments up to 2500 m below the surface.The oxygen-isotope ratios and nannoplankton counts obtained in this study indicate, however, that the majority of samples are most probably recent or at least not older than 85,000 years. This implies that sediments are accumulating on the ocean floor and that the Agulhas Current does not have a pronounced erosional influence, at least in areas from which cores were retrieved for this study.  相似文献   

17.
Detailed analysis of the morphology of Florisphaera profunda from plankton samples collected at three sites in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans reveals wide variation in this deep ocean-dwelling coccolithophore. In addition to the two varieties described previously, we found a third distinctive form, Florisphaera profunda var. rhinocera var. nov. All three varieties occur at each of the sampling sites. The analysis of monthly samples from different levels in the lower photic zone (LPZ) (100–200?m) at the Hawaii Ocean Time series station suggests that the varieties have similar distributions, which are correlated to primary productivity and the availability of light. The analysis of coccolith and coccosphere size in F. profunda reveals the existence of several size modes in Florisphaera profunda var. profunda and F. profunda var. elongata. The biological significance of these modes, or morphotypes is not known. However, their co-occurrence in single samples from different oceanic areas suggests that they are not ecophenotypes. In the light of recent molecular genetic analyses of intraspecific groups within commonly occurring coccolithophores, the varieties and size morphotypes of F. profunda are of significant interest for the study of marine phytoplankton biodiversity. Coccolithophores inhabiting the LPZ may be adapted to the low light, high nutrient conditions of this layer and hold great potential as a means to reconstruct past oceanographic conditions such as the position of the nutricline. However, coccolithophore biodiversity in the LPZ is poorly documented and the number of species may be much higher than previously thought.  相似文献   

18.
A seven month-long time series sediment trap project was carried out in San Pedro Basin (Southern California Borderlands) in order to evaluate the response of calcareous nannoplankton to seasonal hydrographic changes. This region is periodically influenced by upwelling, particularly during the spring and early summer. The highest fluxes of both whole coccospheres and individual coccoliths occurred during winter (January-February), a period when the fluxes of diatoms and planktic foraminifera were low. The highest coccolithophore fluxes were recorded in the mid-February with 860 × 106 coccoliths m−2 day−1, 8 × 106 whole coccospheres m−2 day−1, and 80 mg of coccolith carbonate m−2 day−1. Coccolith carbonate fluxes in January and February account for most of the total carbonate fluxes measured during this period. The season of maximum coccolithophore production in this region (winter) is correlated with weak stratification of the upper water column, low total primary production, low nutrient contents, and low temperatures.Emiliania huxleyi and Florisphaera profunda are the two most abundant species in this region. While E. huxleyi displays no distinct seasonal changes in flux, F. profunda shows a clear preference for cold, low nutrient water conditions and low light levels. Helicosphaera spp. flux is positively correlated to the total coccosphere fluxes and is indicative of high coccolithophore productivity.  相似文献   

19.
Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica are abundant coccolithophore morpho‐species that play key roles in ocean carbon cycling due to their importance as both primary producers and cal‐cifiers. Global change processes such as ocean acidification impact these key calcifying species. The physiology of E. huxleyi, a developing model species, has been widely studied, but its genetic delineation from G. oceanica remains unclear due to a lack of resolution in classical genetic markers. Using nuclear (18S rDNA and 28S rDNA), mitochondrial (cox1, cox2, cox3, rpl16, and dam), and plastidial (16S rDNA, rbcL, tufA, and petA) DNA markers from 99 E. huxleyi and 44 G. oceanica strains, we conducted a multigene/multistrain survey to compare the suitability of different markers for resolving phylogenetic patterns within and between these two morpho‐species. The nuclear genes tested did not provide sufficient resolution to discriminate between the two morpho‐species that diverged only 291Kya. Typical patterns of incomplete lineage sorting were generated in phylogenetic analyses using plastidial genes. In contrast, full morpho‐species delineation was achieved with mitochondrial markers and common intra‐morpho‐species phylogenetic patterns were observed despite differing rates of DNA substitution. Mitochondrial genes are thus promising barcodes for distinguishing these coccolithophore morpho‐species, in particular in the context of environmental monitoring.  相似文献   

20.
Ongoing ocean global change due to anthropogenic activities is causing multiple chemical and physical seawater properties to change simultaneously, which may affect the physiology of marine phytoplankton. The coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi is a model species often employed in the study of the marine carbon cycle. The effect of ocean acidification (OA) on coccolithophore calcification has been extensively studied; however, physiological responses to multiple environmental drivers are still largely unknown. Here we examined two‐way and multiple driver effects of OA and other key environmental drivers—nitrate, phosphate, irradiance, and temperature—on the growth, photosynthetic, and calcification rates, and the elemental composition of E. huxleyi. In addition, changes in functional gene expression were examined to understand the molecular mechanisms underpinning the physiological responses. The single driver manipulation experiments suggest decreased nitrate supply being the most important driver regulating E. huxleyi physiology, by significantly reducing the growth, photosynthetic, and calcification rates. In addition, the interaction of OA and decreased nitrate supply (projected for year 2100) had more negative synergistic effects on E. huxleyi physiology than all other two‐way factorial manipulations, suggesting a linkage between the single dominant driver (nitrate) effects and interactive effects with other drivers. Simultaneous manipulation of all five environmental drivers to the conditions of the projected year 2100 had the largest negative effects on most of the physiological metrics. Furthermore, functional genes associated with inorganic carbon acquisition (RubisCO, AEL1, and δCA) and calcification (CAX3, AEL1, PATP, and NhaA2) were most downregulated by the multiple driver manipulation, revealing linkages between responses of functional gene expression and associated physiological metrics. These findings together indicate that for more holistic projections of coccolithophore responses to future ocean global change, it is necessary to understand the relative importance of environmental drivers both individually (i.e., mechanistic understanding) and interactively (i.e., cumulative effect) on coccolithophore physiology.  相似文献   

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