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Respiratory electron transport activity of microplankton in the Weddell Sea during early spring: influence of the ice cover and the ice edge
Authors:Rosa Martínez  Marta Estrada
Institution:(1) Departamento de Ciencias y Técnicas del Agua, Universidad de Cantabria, E-39005 Stantander, Spain;(2) Institut de Ciencies del Mar, Passeig Nacional, s/n., E-08039 Barcelona, Spain
Abstract:Summary The activity of the respiratory electron transport system (ETS) of the microplankton (<240 mgrm size) was measured in the Northern Weddell Sea during EPOS 1, in the Close Pack Ice (CPI), and in the ice edge (Outer and Inner Marginal Zones, OMIZ and IMIZ). During early spring the activity increased with time and in the pack ice-open water direction. The temporal trend was more obvious than the spatial one. ETS activity ranged from 0.01 to 1.25 ml O2 m–3 h–1 under the ice and from 0.1 to 1.6 ml O2 m–3 h–1 in the open water at the ice edge. Depth-integrated ETS activity in the upper 300 m ranged from 13 to 130 ml O2 m–2h–1. 60% to 80% of the activity took place above 100 m in the OMIZ in the prebloom conditions at the end of the cruise. ETS/Chl a ratios showed the importance of microheterotrophs under the ice, versus a greater phytoplankton dominance in the ice edge-open water zone. The carbon-specific activity reached a maximum (0.43 day–1) in the innermost zone of the CPI where bacteria dominated. Respiratory activity under the ice is important in producing the oxygen deficit observed, due to the negative balance between photosynthesis and respiration. The ETS activity was at the lower range of that found in the region in summer and is comparable to that measured in other oligotrophic, stratified systems in oceanic areas.Data presented here were collected during the European Polarstern Study (EPOS) sponsored by the European Science Foundation
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