25 research outputs found
Leads in Arctic pack ice enable early phytoplankton blooms below snow-covered sea ice
© The Author(s), 2017. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Scientific Reports 7 (2017): 40850, doi:10.1038/srep40850.The Arctic icescape is rapidly transforming from a thicker multiyear ice cover to a thinner and largely seasonal first-year ice cover with significant consequences for Arctic primary production. One critical challenge is to understand how productivity will change within the next decades. Recent studies have reported extensive phytoplankton blooms beneath ponded sea ice during summer, indicating that satellite-based Arctic annual primary production estimates may be significantly underestimated. Here we present a unique time-series of a phytoplankton spring bloom observed beneath snow-covered Arctic pack ice. The bloom, dominated by the haptophyte algae Phaeocystis pouchetii, caused near depletion of the surface nitrate inventory and a decline in dissolved inorganic carbon by 16 ± 6 g C m−2. Ocean circulation characteristics in the area indicated that the bloom developed in situ despite the snow-covered sea ice. Leads in the dynamic ice cover provided added sunlight necessary to initiate and sustain the bloom. Phytoplankton blooms beneath snow-covered ice might become more common and widespread in the future Arctic Ocean with frequent lead formation due to thinner and more dynamic sea ice despite projected increases in high-Arctic snowfall. This could alter productivity, marine food webs and carbon sequestration in the Arctic Ocean.This study was supported by the Centre for Ice, Climate and Ecosystems (ICE) at the Norwegian Polar Institute, the Ministry of Climate and Environment, Norway, the Research Council of Norway (projects Boom or Bust no. 244646, STASIS no. 221961, CORESAT no. 222681, CIRFA no. 237906 and AMOS CeO no. 223254), and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norway (project ID Arctic), the ICE-ARC program of the European Union 7th Framework Program (grant number 603887), the Polish-Norwegian Research Program operated by the National Centre for Research and Development under the Norwegian Financial Mechanism 2009–2014 in the frame of Project Contract Pol-Nor/197511/40/2013, CDOM-HEAT, and the Ocean Acidification Flagship program within the FRAM- High North Research Centre for Climate and the Environment, Norway
Sea-ice retreat controls timing of summer plankton blooms in the Eastern Arctic Ocean
Two full-year mooring records of sea ice, physical and bio-optical parameters illuminate tight temporal coupling between the retreating seasonal ice edge and the summer phytoplankton bloom on the Laptev Sea shelf. Our records showed no sign of pelagic under-ice blooms despite available nutrients and thinning sea ice in early summer; presumably because stratification had not yet developed. Chlorophyll blooms were detected immediately after the ice retreated in late May 2014 and late July 2015. Despite radically different timing, the blooms were similar in both magnitude and length, interpreted as community-level nutrient limitation. Acoustic backscatter records suggest the delayed 2015-bloom resulted in lower zooplankton abundance, perhaps due to a timing mismatch between ice algal and pelagic blooms and unfavorable thermal conditions. Our observations provide classical examples of ice-edge blooms and further emphasize the complexity of high-latitude shelves and the need to understand vertical mixing processes important for stratification and nutrient fluxes
Short commentary on marine productivity at Arctic shelf breaks: upwelling, advection and vertical mixing
The future of Arctic marine ecosystems has received increasing attention in
recent years as the extent of the sea ice cover is dwindling. Although the
Pacific and Atlantic inflows both import huge quantities of nutrients and
plankton, they feed into the Arctic Ocean in quite diverse regions. The
strongly stratified Pacific sector has a historically heavy ice cover, a
shallow shelf and dominant upwelling-favourable winds, while the Atlantic
sector is weakly stratified, with a dynamic ice edge and a complex
bathymetry. We argue that shelf break upwelling is likely not a universal but
rather a regional, albeit recurring, feature of the new Arctic. It is the
regional oceanography that decides its importance through a range of diverse
factors such as stratification, bathymetry and wind forcing. Teasing apart
their individual contributions in different regions can only be achieved by
spatially resolved time series and dedicated modelling efforts. The Northern
Barents Sea shelf is an example of a region where shelf break upwelling
likely does not play a dominant role, in contrast to the shallower shelves
north of Alaska where ample evidence for its importance has already
accumulated. Still, other factors can contribute to marked future increases
in biological productivity along the Arctic shelf break. A warming inflow of
nutrient-rich Atlantic Water feeds plankton at the same time as it melts the sea ice,
permitting increased photosynthesis. Concurrent changes in sea ice cover and
zooplankton communities advected with the boundary currents make for a
complex mosaic of regulating factors that do not allow for Arctic-wide
generalizations