TY - JOUR
T1 - Alkenone abundance and its relationship to the coccolithophore assemblage in Gulf of California surface waters
AU - Malinverno, E.
AU - Prahl, F. G.
AU - Popp, B. N.
AU - Ziveri, P.
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to: Bianca de Bernardi and Mascha Dedert for collecting all coccolithophore samples on the first summer and winter cruise, respectively; Ida Royer, Terri Rust and Richard Wallsgrove for help with many facets of field work on all three cruises; Margaret Sparrow for performing all alkenone and pigment analyses; Helmar Smits for synthesis of the standard reference compound used to gauge alkenone recovery; and both the captains and crew of the R/V New Horizon for making all three cruises not only successful but also most enjoyable. This research was funded by US National Science Foundation Grants OCE-0350409 & 0326573 (FP) and OCE-0324299 (BP). The research was also supported by The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO/ALW EuroCLIMATE, 855.01.086) and the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science co-funded by the European Social Fund. This is SOEST contribution number 7465.
PY - 2008/9
Y1 - 2008/9
N2 - Profiles of alkenone concentration, the abundance of the calcified alkenone-producing species Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica as well as nutrient and phytoplankton pigment concentrations were measured through the euphotic zone in surface waters of the Gulf of California during cruises in two different summers (2004, 2005) and one winter (2005). As determined using a biomarker and pigment inventory approach, E. huxleyi and G. oceanica, always the most abundant coccolithophore species at all sampling sites and seasons, represented only a minor fraction of total haptophytes which themselves constituted only a minor fraction of the total phytoplankton community. In winter, alkenone concentration was highest at the surface and displayed relatively uniform values with depth throughout the nutrient-replete euphotic zone. In summer, it display a subsurface peak in nitrate-depleted waters situated just above the nitracline and the deep chlorophyll maximum layer (DCML), a feature found to be well-developed at most sites. Maximum biomarker abundance was comparable in the two seasons, although the putative alkenone-producing coccolithophore species were more abundant in winter than in summer. Estimates of cellular alkenone content for the combined abundance of E. huxleyi and G. oceanica at each sampling depth showed that cells residing in the nitrate-depleted upper euphotic zone in summer were typically more enriched than those residing in nutrient-replete waters found deeper in the euphotic zone or throughout the euphotic zone in winter. The former estimates were very similar to values documented in laboratory cultures of E. huxleyi harvested in a nutrient-depleted stationary growth phase and the latter to those harvested in an exponential growth phase, under the influence of incipient light limitation. Overall, our findings imply that calcifying forms of E. huxleyi and G. oceanica can account for the measured alkenone concentration at all sites and sampling times. Although the life history of these organisms is known to include non-calcifying stages, it is unnecessary to invoke such an explanation as the cause for the elevated alkenone content of cells from nutrient-depleted surface waters in summer.
AB - Profiles of alkenone concentration, the abundance of the calcified alkenone-producing species Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica as well as nutrient and phytoplankton pigment concentrations were measured through the euphotic zone in surface waters of the Gulf of California during cruises in two different summers (2004, 2005) and one winter (2005). As determined using a biomarker and pigment inventory approach, E. huxleyi and G. oceanica, always the most abundant coccolithophore species at all sampling sites and seasons, represented only a minor fraction of total haptophytes which themselves constituted only a minor fraction of the total phytoplankton community. In winter, alkenone concentration was highest at the surface and displayed relatively uniform values with depth throughout the nutrient-replete euphotic zone. In summer, it display a subsurface peak in nitrate-depleted waters situated just above the nitracline and the deep chlorophyll maximum layer (DCML), a feature found to be well-developed at most sites. Maximum biomarker abundance was comparable in the two seasons, although the putative alkenone-producing coccolithophore species were more abundant in winter than in summer. Estimates of cellular alkenone content for the combined abundance of E. huxleyi and G. oceanica at each sampling depth showed that cells residing in the nitrate-depleted upper euphotic zone in summer were typically more enriched than those residing in nutrient-replete waters found deeper in the euphotic zone or throughout the euphotic zone in winter. The former estimates were very similar to values documented in laboratory cultures of E. huxleyi harvested in a nutrient-depleted stationary growth phase and the latter to those harvested in an exponential growth phase, under the influence of incipient light limitation. Overall, our findings imply that calcifying forms of E. huxleyi and G. oceanica can account for the measured alkenone concentration at all sites and sampling times. Although the life history of these organisms is known to include non-calcifying stages, it is unnecessary to invoke such an explanation as the cause for the elevated alkenone content of cells from nutrient-depleted surface waters in summer.
KW - 19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin
KW - Alkenones
KW - Coccolithophores
KW - Emiliania huxleyi
KW - Gephyrocapsa oceanica
KW - Gulf of California
KW - Haptophytes
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=48349132648&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.dsr.2008.04.007
DO - 10.1016/j.dsr.2008.04.007
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:48349132648
SN - 0967-0637
VL - 55
SP - 1118
EP - 1130
JO - Deep-Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
JF - Deep-Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
IS - 9
ER -