Vertically Resolved Pelagic Particle Biomass and Size Structure Across a Continental Shelf Under the Influence of a Western Boundary Current

Author:

Schilling Hayden T.123ORCID,Everett Jason D.24ORCID,Schaeffer Amandine25ORCID,Hinchliffe Charles12,Yates Peter12,Baird Mark E.6,Suthers Iain M.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sydney Institute of Marine Science Mosman NSW Australia

2. Centre for Marine Science & Innovation Kensington NSW Australia

3. Now at New South Wales Department of Primary Industries Port Stephens Fisheries Institute Taylors Beach NSW Australia

4. School of Mathematics and Physics University of Queensland Brisbane QLD Australia

5. School of Mathematics and Statistics Kensington NSW Australia

6. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation Battery Point TAS Australia

Abstract

AbstractContinental shelves are key to societal interactions with the oceans, supporting >90% of the world's fisheries through highly productive ecosystems. Previous research has shown that phytoplankton biomass is generally higher on the inner continental shelves, often due to increased nutrient inputs from upwelling or coastal run‐off. However, consistency in observed vertical and horizontal gradients (in abundance, biomass or size) of larger particulates, including zooplankton, on continental shelves has not been established. Using an optical plankton counter and CTD mounted on an undulating towed body, we present high‐resolution vertically resolved profiles of pelagic particle size structure across a continental shelf. Biomass was highest inshore, declining with distance from shore and with depth in the top 100 m of the water column, although the presence of frontal zones can alter this pattern. In the region adjacent to the East Australian Current (EAC), uplift generated by either the EAC interacting with the continental slope or upwelling‐favorable winds, correlated with smaller geometric mean sizes and steeper size spectrum slopes, particularly in the presence of frontal features. South of the EAC separation, the continental shelf water mass was more homogenous but still displayed the same horizontal and vertical patterns in particulate biomass and mean size. By combining our observations in a global comparison, we demonstrate consistent particulate distributions on continental shelves where the inner shelf has higher biomass with a steeper size spectrum slope compared to offshore. The highly productive inner shelf supports zooplankton communities vital to temperate ecosystems and coastal fisheries, through their consistently high biomass.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Space and Planetary Science,Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics,Oceanography

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