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Plankton dynamics of the open Southern Ocean and surrounding the (Sub)Antarctic islands

The Southern Ocean is a high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll region where primary productivity is limited mainly by iron and light availability, yet it accounts for ~30-40% of global ocean CO2 absorption annually. Marine plankton play a major role in the Southern Ocean CO2 sink as they fix dissolved atmos...

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Main Author: Stirnimann, Luca
Other Authors: Fawcett, Sarah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Oceanography 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Stirnimann, Luca
author2 Fawcett, Sarah
author_browse Fawcett, Sarah
Stirnimann, Luca
author_facet Fawcett, Sarah
Stirnimann, Luca
author_sort Stirnimann, Luca
collection Thesis
description The Southern Ocean is a high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll region where primary productivity is limited mainly by iron and light availability, yet it accounts for ~30-40% of global ocean CO2 absorption annually. Marine plankton play a major role in the Southern Ocean CO2 sink as they fix dissolved atmospheric CO2 into organic carbon biomass, much of which supports the ocean food web and a portion of which sinks into the ocean interior, thereby removing atmospheric CO2 on decadal to centennial timescales (i.e., the biological carbon pump). The importance of plankton diversity and dynamics in modulating carbon production and export remains poorly understood, particularly around the many (Sub)Antarctic islands where physical and biogeochemical variability is high. The major motivation for the work presented in this thesis is an improved understanding of the role of the plankton system in Southern Ocean fertility and carbon export, and relatedly, the response of the plankton to environmental forcing such as changes in nutrient dynamics driven by hydrography and island mass effects. To that end, I investigated plankton community diversity and ecological dynamics in the context of nutrient cycling, primary production, and carbon export potential in the open Southern Ocean and in the vicinity of its many island systems. Specifically, I used carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios as a tool to quantify carbon export potential and food web dynamics across all major hydrographic zones and basins of the Southern Ocean. Five main findings emerged. Firstly, I developed insights into the major drivers of spatial and temporal variability in the carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios (δ13C and δ15N) of the Southern Ocean's plankton system using circum-Antarctic carbon and nitrogen isoscapes. Along with the drivers commonly invoked by previous studies, I further determined a relationship between the δ13C and δ15N of suspended particulate matter (SPM) and phytoplankton community composition, with diatoms exerting a particularly strong influence on the δ13C and δ15N of the SPM, which is subsequently transferred to the zooplankton. Secondly, I observed that the (Sub)Antarctic islands tend to increase the δ13C and δ 15N of phytoplankton and zooplankton relative to the open Southern Ocean. This trend can be explained by the input of terrestrially-derived iron and other nutrients (e.g., ammonium and/or urea from birds and seals) into the surface layer, which stimulate diatom growth on nitrate and/or exogenous reduced nitrogen sources that are high in δ15N. Thirdly, I applied a new approach using the δ15N of seawater nitrate and SPM to quantify carbon export potential across the summertime Southern Ocean. I found that carbon export potential is highest near the islands and melting sea ice, driven by the input of limiting nutrients (i.e., iron) and by the dominance of diatoms. Fourthly, I found that the δ15N of SPM is a reliable baseline for trophic analysis of the zooplankton system over a large spatial extent of the Southern Ocean (i.e., circum-Antarctic). Since the collection and analysis of SPM samples for δ15N is relatively straightforward, this result should be welcomed by researchers who use such data to reconstruct trophic flows through plankton food webs, as well as the movements and dietary histories of zooplankton in the Southern Ocean. Finally, my new zooplankton δ13C and δ15N isoscapes reveal that during the summer, the primary zooplankton consumers in the Subantarctic waters of the Southern Ocean occupy a low trophic position akin to herbivores, implying that the Subantarctic food web may act to retain organic carbon within the euphotic zone instead of exporting it to depth. By contrast, the primary consumers in Antarctic waters occupy a higher trophic position that suggests they are omnivores and carnivores, which potentially indicates a shorter food chain and thus a stronger biological pump. The work detailed in this thesis suggests new methodological approaches for studying the Southern Ocean plankton system and offers an improved understanding of plankton dynamics and their relationship(s) with the biogeochemical processes that govern the different zones of the Southern Ocean.
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language eng
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38546 Plankton dynamics of the open Southern Ocean and surrounding the (Sub)Antarctic islands Stirnimann, Luca Fawcett, Sarah Bornman, Thomas G Verheye, Sir Hans M. Plankton dynamics The Southern Ocean is a high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll region where primary productivity is limited mainly by iron and light availability, yet it accounts for ~30-40% of global ocean CO2 absorption annually. Marine plankton play a major role in the Southern Ocean CO2 sink as they fix dissolved atmospheric CO2 into organic carbon biomass, much of which supports the ocean food web and a portion of which sinks into the ocean interior, thereby removing atmospheric CO2 on decadal to centennial timescales (i.e., the biological carbon pump). The importance of plankton diversity and dynamics in modulating carbon production and export remains poorly understood, particularly around the many (Sub)Antarctic islands where physical and biogeochemical variability is high. The major motivation for the work presented in this thesis is an improved understanding of the role of the plankton system in Southern Ocean fertility and carbon export, and relatedly, the response of the plankton to environmental forcing such as changes in nutrient dynamics driven by hydrography and island mass effects. To that end, I investigated plankton community diversity and ecological dynamics in the context of nutrient cycling, primary production, and carbon export potential in the open Southern Ocean and in the vicinity of its many island systems. Specifically, I used carbon and nitrogen stable isotope ratios as a tool to quantify carbon export potential and food web dynamics across all major hydrographic zones and basins of the Southern Ocean. Five main findings emerged. Firstly, I developed insights into the major drivers of spatial and temporal variability in the carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios (δ13C and δ15N) of the Southern Ocean's plankton system using circum-Antarctic carbon and nitrogen isoscapes. Along with the drivers commonly invoked by previous studies, I further determined a relationship between the δ13C and δ15N of suspended particulate matter (SPM) and phytoplankton community composition, with diatoms exerting a particularly strong influence on the δ13C and δ15N of the SPM, which is subsequently transferred to the zooplankton. Secondly, I observed that the (Sub)Antarctic islands tend to increase the δ13C and δ 15N of phytoplankton and zooplankton relative to the open Southern Ocean. This trend can be explained by the input of terrestrially-derived iron and other nutrients (e.g., ammonium and/or urea from birds and seals) into the surface layer, which stimulate diatom growth on nitrate and/or exogenous reduced nitrogen sources that are high in δ15N. Thirdly, I applied a new approach using the δ15N of seawater nitrate and SPM to quantify carbon export potential across the summertime Southern Ocean. I found that carbon export potential is highest near the islands and melting sea ice, driven by the input of limiting nutrients (i.e., iron) and by the dominance of diatoms. Fourthly, I found that the δ15N of SPM is a reliable baseline for trophic analysis of the zooplankton system over a large spatial extent of the Southern Ocean (i.e., circum-Antarctic). Since the collection and analysis of SPM samples for δ15N is relatively straightforward, this result should be welcomed by researchers who use such data to reconstruct trophic flows through plankton food webs, as well as the movements and dietary histories of zooplankton in the Southern Ocean. Finally, my new zooplankton δ13C and δ15N isoscapes reveal that during the summer, the primary zooplankton consumers in the Subantarctic waters of the Southern Ocean occupy a low trophic position akin to herbivores, implying that the Subantarctic food web may act to retain organic carbon within the euphotic zone instead of exporting it to depth. By contrast, the primary consumers in Antarctic waters occupy a higher trophic position that suggests they are omnivores and carnivores, which potentially indicates a shorter food chain and thus a stronger biological pump. The work detailed in this thesis suggests new methodological approaches for studying the Southern Ocean plankton system and offers an improved understanding of plankton dynamics and their relationship(s) with the biogeochemical processes that govern the different zones of the Southern Ocean. 2023-09-12T09:01:22Z 2023-09-12T09:01:22Z 2023 2023-09-12T08:39:26Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38546 eng application/pdf Department of Oceanography Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Plankton dynamics
Stirnimann, Luca
Plankton dynamics of the open Southern Ocean and surrounding the (Sub)Antarctic islands
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Plankton dynamics of the open Southern Ocean and surrounding the (Sub)Antarctic islands
title_full Plankton dynamics of the open Southern Ocean and surrounding the (Sub)Antarctic islands
title_fullStr Plankton dynamics of the open Southern Ocean and surrounding the (Sub)Antarctic islands
title_full_unstemmed Plankton dynamics of the open Southern Ocean and surrounding the (Sub)Antarctic islands
title_short Plankton dynamics of the open Southern Ocean and surrounding the (Sub)Antarctic islands
title_sort plankton dynamics of the open southern ocean and surrounding the sub antarctic islands
topic Plankton dynamics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38546
work_keys_str_mv AT stirnimannluca planktondynamicsoftheopensouthernoceanandsurroundingthesubantarcticislands