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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-08-15
    Description: Observations of the dinoflagellate Dinophysis norvegica in the Baltic Sea during the summers of 1991–1993 indicate that maximal abundances (c 40–150 × 103 cells l-1) were found at the thermocline, typically at 12°C. Maximum densities were usually between 12 and 15 m where 2·9% and 1·5% of surface photon irradiances, respectively, were measured. No diel vertical migration was observed, and cell densities in the mixed layer were always low. Photosynthesis versus irradiance measurements with an oxygen electrode indicated that these populations had a P max of 2·47 [coefficient of variation (CV) 7·3%] and 3·4 (CV 4·7%) mg O2 mg Chl a -1 h-1, and compensation values of photon irradiance were 16·5 and 83 μmol m-2 s-1 in 1992 and 1993, respectively. Both oxygen electrode and 14C light/dark bottle measurements indicated that D. norvegica had very little net photosynthesis at the depths where it was most abundant; it would have had about 2·5-fold greater capacity at photon irradiances present closer to the surface. Calculated carbon doubling times via photosynthesis averaged 4–11 months. There was no observable diel rhythym of DNA synthesis, suggesting that either D. norvegica was not dividing synchronously (asynchronous division is common in heterotrophs) or not dividing at all. Electron microscopy did not reveal the presence of food vacuoles, but feeding and digestion could have been extracellular. The data suggest that this species is a mixotroph which received its primary nutrition via heterotrophic means during our observation periods in the summers of 1991–1993.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    Taylor & Francis
    In:  Ophelia, 26 . pp. 359-368.
    Publication Date: 2019-02-27
    Description: Long-term investigations of pore-water ammonium concentrations and sediment oxygen uptake were carried out in three different sediment types along a slope in Kiel Bight. The inverse relation between mineralization rates and ammonium concentrations at the three stations is explained by the differences in the role of various mechanisms transporting nutrients out of the sediments. Direct water exchange due to turbulent or density driven processes, bioturbation and pumping activity of benthic macrofauna and molecular diffusion are involved to various extents in nutrient fluxes out of the sediments studied. The role of different sediment types in the interaction with the pelagic system is discussed in a conceptual framework of pelagic system functioning in Kiel Bight.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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