RECONCILING AGGREGATION-THEORY WITH OBSERVED VERTICAL FLUXES FOLLOWING PHYTOPLANKTON BLOOMS

被引:126
作者
HILL, PS [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV WASHINGTON, SCH OCEANOG, WB-10, SEATTLE, WA 98195 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1029/91JC02808
中图分类号
P7 [海洋学];
学科分类号
0707 ;
摘要
Sediment trap data show that rapidly sinking pulses of phytodetritus form after phytoplankton blooms, even when bloom intensity is low. A numerical model of physical aggregation and sedimentation in the surface ocean was used to gauge whether predicted aggregation rates were high enough to generate postbloom sediment pulses. Initial models behaved inaccurately without a full range of particle sizes, abundant nonphytoplankton particles, and explicit hydrodynamic retardation of particle contact. Provision for background particles while tracking phytoplankton required implementation of a novel bookkeeping scheme. To address the degree of retardation for contact between particles, an expression for contact efficiency for collision by turbulent shear was developed. The most realistic way to produce model results that mimicked field data was to include background particles, to invoke particle stickiness in the range 0.1-1.0, and to make modest upward adjustments to contact efficiencies calculated for impermeable spheres. For all but the highest background particle concentrations, the magnitude of a postbloom sediment pulse scaled nonlinearly with vertically integrated cell number in the surface layer of our two layer model. The existence of a nonlinear relationship between pulse size and bloom intensity makes initial cell number per unit of area in the surface layer, and not productivity, the proximate determinant of carbon export flux. This result emphasizes the need for caution when applying established scalings between export flux and productivity. Further, it provides a mechanistic explanation both for tight pelagic-benthic coupling under waters prone to intense blooms and for interannual variability in export flux in polar regions.
引用
收藏
页码:2295 / 2308
页数:14
相关论文
共 79 条
[31]   A MODEL OF THE FORMATION OF MARINE ALGAL FLOCS BY PHYSICAL COAGULATION PROCESSES [J].
JACKSON, GA .
DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART A-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 1990, 37 (08) :1197-1211
[32]   COAGULATION EFFICIENCY AND AGGREGATE FORMATION IN MARINE-PHYTOPLANKTON [J].
KIORBOE, T ;
ANDERSEN, KP ;
DAM, HG .
MARINE BIOLOGY, 1990, 107 (02) :235-245
[33]   FLUXES OF PARTICULATE CARBON, NITROGEN, AND PHOSPHORUS IN THE UPPER WATER COLUMN OF THE NORTHEAST PACIFIC [J].
KNAUER, GA ;
MARTIN, JH ;
BRULAND, KW .
DEEP-SEA RESEARCH, 1979, 26 (01) :97-108
[34]  
KOZLOVA OG, 1970, ANTARCT ECOL, V1, P148
[35]   MACROFLOCS FROM DIATOMS - INSITU PHOTOGRAPHY OF PARTICLES IN BEDFORD BASIN, NOVA-SCOTIA [J].
KRANCK, K ;
MILLIGAN, TG .
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 1988, 44 (02) :183-189
[36]  
LANDAU LD, 1959, FLUID MECHANICS, P77
[37]  
LAWLER DF, 1980, ADV CHEM SER, V189, P243
[38]   ELIMINATION OF FINE SUSPENSOIDS IN OCEANIC WATER COLUMN [J].
LERMAN, A ;
CARDER, KL ;
BETZER, PR .
EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 1977, 37 (01) :61-70
[39]   FRACTAL GEOMETRY OF MARINE SNOW AND OTHER BIOLOGICAL AGGREGATES [J].
LOGAN, BE ;
WILKINSON, DB .
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 1990, 35 (01) :130-136
[40]   TERMINAL VELOCITY OF POROUS SPHERES [J].
MASLIYAH, JH ;
POLIKAR, M .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, 1980, 58 (03) :299-302