4.7 Article

Increasing nutrient stress reduces the efficiency of energy transfer through planktonic size spectra

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 66, Issue 2, Pages 422-437

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lno.11613

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) through its National Capability Long-term Single Centre Science Programme, Climate Linked Atlantic Sector Science [NE/R015953/1]
  2. NERC
  3. Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Marine Ecosystems Research Programme [NE/L00299X/1]
  4. NERC [NE/T010843/1, pml010004, NE/L00299X/1, pml010007, pml010009, NE/L003279/1, NE/K001779/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Size-spectral approaches can quantify the efficiency of energy transfer in food webs, but there is disagreement over how changes in temperature, nutrients, and extreme weather impact this efficiency. Studies found that efficiency of energy transfer is affected by seasonal nutrient starvation and extreme storms, but the system showed resilience and recovered quickly. The analysis suggests that ocean warming may decrease energy transfer efficiency in pelagic food webs due to indirect effects of increasing stratification and nutrient starvation.
Size-spectral approaches quantify the efficiency of energy transfer through food webs, but theory and field studies disagree over how changes in temperature, nutrients, and extreme weather impact on this efficiency. We address this at two scales: via 6 years of weekly sampling of the plankton size spectrum at the Plymouth L4 shelf sea site, and via a new, global-scale, meta-analysis of aquatic size spectra. The time series showed that with summertime nutrient starvation, the energy transfer efficiency from picoplankton to macroplankton decreased (i.e., steepening slopes of the size spectra). This reflected increasing dominance by small cells and their microbial consumers. The extreme storms in winter 2013/2014 caused high metazoan mortality, steep size-spectral slopes, and reduced plankton biomass. However, recovery was within months, demonstrating an inbuilt resilience of the system. Both L4 and our meta-analysis showed steep slopes of normalized size spectra (median -1.11). This reflects much lower values, either of trophic transfer efficiency (3.5%) or predator-prey mass ratio (569), compared to commonly quoted values. Results from the meta-analysis further showed that to represent energy transfer faithfully, size spectra are best constructed in units of carbon mass and not biovolume, and span a mass range of > 10(7). When this range is covered, both the meta-analysis and time series show a dome-shaped relationship between spectral slopes and plankton biomass, with steepening slopes under increasingly oligotrophic and eutrophic conditions. This suggests that ocean warming could decrease the efficiency of energy transfer through pelagic food webs via indirect effects of increasing stratification and nutrient starvation.

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