Absence of photophysiological response to iron addition in autumn phytoplankton in the Antarctic sea-ice zone
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Published:2023-07-31
Issue:14
Volume:20
Page:3073-3091
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Singh AsmitaORCID, Fietz Susanne, Thomalla Sandy J.ORCID, Sanchez Nicolas, Ardelan Murat V., Moreau Sébastien, Kauko Hanna M.ORCID, Fransson AgnetaORCID, Chierici MelissaORCID, Samanta Saumik, Mtshali Thato N., Roychoudhury Alakendra N.ORCID, Ryan-Keogh Thomas J.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The high nutrient–low chlorophyll condition of the
Southern Ocean is generally thought to be caused by the low bioavailability
of micronutrients, particularly iron, which plays an integral role in
phytoplankton photosynthesis. Nevertheless, the Southern Ocean experiences
seasonal blooms that generally initiate in austral spring, peak in summer,
and extend into autumn. This seasonal increase in primary productivity is
typically linked to the seasonal characteristics of nutrient and light
supply. To better understand the potential limitations on productivity in
the Antarctic sea-ice zone (SIZ), the photophysiological response of
phytoplankton to iron addition (2.0 nM FeCl3) was investigated during
autumn along the Antarctic coast off Dronning Maud Land. Five short-term (24 h) incubation experiments were conducted around Astrid Ridge (68∘ S) and along a 6∘ E transect, where an autumn bloom was identified
in the region of the western SIZ. Surface iron concentrations ranged from
0.27 to 1.39 nM around Astrid Ridge, and 0.56 to 0.63 nM along the
6∘ E transect. Contrary to expectation, the photophysiological
response of phytoplankton to iron addition, measured through the
photosynthetic efficiency and the absorption cross-section for photosystem
II, showed no significant responses. It is thus proposed that since the
autumn phytoplankton in the SIZ exhibited a lack of an iron limitation at
the time of sampling, the ambient iron concentrations may have been
sufficient to fulfil the cellular requirements. This provides new insights
into extended iron replete post-bloom conditions in the typically assumed
iron deficient high nutrient–low chlorophyll Southern Ocean.
Funder
National Research Foundation Norges Forskningsråd Department of Science and Innovation, South Africa
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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