Millennial-scale plankton regime shifts in the subtropical North Pacific Ocean.

Science

Department of Ocean Sciences, University of California-Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA. Institute for Marine Sciences, University of California-Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA 94550, USA.

Published: December 2015

Climate change is predicted to alter marine phytoplankton communities and affect productivity, biogeochemistry, and the efficacy of the biological pump. We reconstructed high-resolution records of changing plankton community composition in the North Pacific Ocean over the past millennium. Amino acid-specific δ(13)C records preserved in long-lived deep-sea corals revealed three major plankton regimes corresponding to Northern Hemisphere climate periods. Non-dinitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria dominated during the Medieval Climate Anomaly (950-1250 Common Era) before giving way to a new regime in which eukaryotic microalgae contributed nearly half of all export production during the Little Ice Age (~1400-1850 Common Era). The third regime, unprecedented in the past millennium, began in the industrial era and is characterized by increasing production by dinitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria. This picoplankton community shift may provide a negative feedback to rising atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aaa9942DOI Listing

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