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Bio-optical variability across the Arctic Front

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Summary

Biological and optical characterization of the Arctic Front (AF), which separates North Atlantic waters from the Greenland Sea Gyre, has not been well studied and we report, herein, the first synoptic description of bio-optical and temperature variability across the AF utilizing both shipboard (vertical and horizontal measurements utilizing the towed Undulating Oceanographic Record, UOR) and satellite (AVHRR) observations of sea surface temperature and visible band reflectances (580–680 nm). The UOR measures depth, temperature, in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence, upwelling and downwelling hemispherical (450, 488 and 550 nm) and vector (488 and 550 nm) irradiances at 10 s intervals during vertical undulations from 2 to 50 m. During a UOR tow on 19 August 1986, the AF was encountered as a sharp boundary with an abrupt change in bio-optical properties within the upper 50 m over a few miles. Temperatures increased from 5.7° to 8.4°C with the average chlorophyll concentration and diffuse attenuation coefficient [K(450)] increasing by factors of 4.1 and 1.8, respectively. Discrete samples for species composition and HPLC pigment analysis, taken within this high pigment region (150 miles in width), indicated that this near surface bloom was a mixed phytoplankton population with moderate concentrations of the coccolithophorid, Emiliania huxleyi. AVHRR visible band imagery showed a high reflectance patch adjacent to the frontal boundary which are normally associated with substantial concentration of coccolithophorids. If our observations on the magnitude and extent of the biomass are typical of the AF, it should have an important role in marine biogeochemical production in this high latitude area.

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Trees, C.C., Aiken, J., Hirche, HJ. et al. Bio-optical variability across the Arctic Front. Polar Biol 12, 455–461 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00243116

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00243116

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