During summer 2010, we investigated phytoplankton production and growth rates at 19 stations in the eastern tropical Pacific, where winds and strong opposing currents generate the Costa Rica Dome (CRD), an open-ocean upwelling feature. Primary production (C-incorporation) and group-specific growth and net growth rates (two-treatment seawater dilution method) were estimated from samples incubated at eight depths. Our cruise coincided with a mild El Niño event, and only weak upwelling was observed in the CRD. Nevertheless, the highest phytoplankton abundances were found near the dome center. However, mixed-layer growth rates were lowest in the dome center (∼0.5-0.9 day), but higher on the edge of the dome (∼0.9-1.0 day) and in adjacent coastal waters (0.9-1.3 day). We found good agreement between independent methods to estimate growth rates. Mixed-layer growth rates of and were largely balanced by mortality, whereas eukaryotic phytoplankton showed positive net growth (∼0.5-0.6 day), that is, growth available to support larger (mesozooplankton) consumer biomass. These are the first group-specific phytoplankton rate estimates in this region, and they demonstrate that integrated primary production is high, exceeding 1 g C m day on average, even during a period of reduced upwelling.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4889980 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/plankt/fbv063 | DOI Listing |
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