The Global Distribution of Grazing Dynamics Estimated From Inverse Modeling

Author:

Rohr Tyler123ORCID,Richardson Anthony45ORCID,Lenton Andrew67ORCID,Chamberlain Matthew A.7,Shadwick Elizabeth H.27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Science University of Tasmania Hobart TAS Australia

2. Australian Antarctic Program Partnership Hobart TAS Australia

3. Australian Center for Excellence in Antarctic Science Hobart Tas Australia

4. School of the Environment The University of Queensland St Lucia QLD Australia

5. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Environment BioSciences Precinct (QBP) St Lucia QLD Australia

6. Permanent Carbon Locking Future Science Platform Commonwealth Scientific and Industiral Research Organisation (CSIRO) Envirionment Hobart Tas Austrlia

7. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Environment Hobart TAS Australia

Abstract

AbstractGrazing dynamics are one of the most poorly constrained components of the marine carbon cycle. We use inverse modeling to infer the distribution of community‐integrated zooplankton grazing dynamics based on the ability of different grazing formulations to recreate the satellite‐observed seasonal cycle in phytoplankton biomass after controlling for physical and bottom‐up controls. We find large spatial variability in the optimal community‐integrated half saturation concentration for grazing (K1/2), with lower (higher) values required in more oligotrophic (eutrophic) biomes. This leads to a strong sigmoidal relationship between observed mean‐annual phytoplankton biomass and the optimally inferred grazing parameterization. This relationship can be used to help constrain, validate and/or parameterize next‐generation biogeochemical models.

Funder

Australian Government

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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