4.3 Article

Winter bloom of coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi and environmental conditions in the Dardanelles

Journal

HYDROLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue 2, Pages 104-114

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/nh.2010.124

Keywords

algal blooms; Dardanelles; Emiliania huxleyi; environmental factors; winter

Funding

  1. Turkish Scientific and Technical Research Council, Environmental, Atmospheric, Earth and Marine Sciences Research Group (TUBITAK-CAYDAG) [101Y081]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Following a summer bloom of coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) Hay & Mohler, 1967, in 2003, a winter bloom was observed for the first time between late December 2003 and early January 2004 in the Dardanelles. Microscopic observations showed that the cell dimensions of E. huxleyi (Ehux) varied from 9.85 to 13.50 mu m in diameter (mean: 11.20 +/- 1.38 mu m). While Ehux revealed a relatively small population density (1.60 x 10(4) cells L-1) in early December 2003, the bloom started in middle December 2003 (7.86 x 10(6) cells L-1) and then peaked in early January 2004 (5.03 x 10(7) cells L-1) in the superficial layer. The peak dramatically decreased in late January 2004 (7.50 x 10(6) cells L-1). Ehux was the dominant species and represented about 90.0% of the phytoplankton assemblage. The bloom started flourishing after the diatom and dinoflagellate blooms under nitrogen depletion and moderate light, temperature and salinity conditions. Water temperature (10.31 +/- 1.14 degrees C) and salinity values (27.05 +/- 0.88 ppt) were usually stabile. Surface chlorophyll-a concentrations ranged from 1.23 to 2.32 mu g L-1 during the bloom. The ratios of N:P (mean: 4.12 +/- 2.22) and Si:P (40.35 +/- 16.25) of the bloom period were lower than those of the non-bloom periods.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available