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  • Elsevier  (1)
  • Institut für Meereskunde  (1)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-05-23
    Description: Results obtained from short-term (8 h to 24 h intervals) measurements of physical, chemical and biological properties of the 70 m water column from an anchor station in the Bornholm Sea over a 10-day period are presented and discussed. Phytoplankton biomass concentration and production rates indicated that the spring bloom was in progress in this period. The onset of the spring bloom occurred prior to the advent of thermal stratification. Peak growth rates, accompanied by nutrient depletion and biomass accumulation in surface layers, were concomitant with calm weather and a cloudless sky after which a part of the population was observed to sink out of the water column unimpeded by the permanent halocline. Maximum sinking rates of the dominant species, Skeletonema costatum, ranged between 30 to 50 m per day during this event. The development of the spring bloom apparently takes place in a series of events during which periods of low production alternate with periods of high production and rapid sedimentation of parts of the population.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    Elsevier
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 49 (8). pp. 1431-1444.
    Publication Date: 2016-10-28
    Description: Observations during a spring phytoplankton bloom in the northeast Atlantic between March and May 1992 in the Biotrans region at 47°N, 20°W, are presented. During most of the observation period there was a positive heat flux into the ocean, winds were weak, and the mixed layer depth was shallow (〈40 m). Phytoplankton growth conditions were favourable during this time. Phytoplankton biomass roughly doubled within the euphotic zone over the course of about 7 days during mid-April, and rapidly increased towards the end of the study until silicate was depleted. However, the stratification of the water column was transient, and the spring bloom development was repeatedly interrupted by gales. During two storms, in late March and late April, the mixed-layer depth increased to 250 and 175 m, respectively. After the storm events significant amounts of chlorophyll-a, particulate organic carbon and biogenic silica were found well below the euphotic zone. It is estimated that between 56% and 65% of the seasonal new production between winter and early May was exported from the euphotic zone by convective mixing, in particular, during the two storm events. Data from the NABE 47°N study during spring 1989 are re-evaluated. It is found that convective particle export was of importance during the early part of that bloom too, but negligible during the height of the bloom in May 1989. The overall impact of convective particle export during spring 1989 was equivalent to about 36% of new production. In view of these and previously published findings it is concluded that convective transport during spring is a significant process for the export of particulate matter from the euphotic zone in the temperate North Atlantic
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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