4.7 Article

Carbon Export in the Seasonal Sea Ice Zone North of Svalbard From Winter to Late Summer

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2020.525800

Keywords

vertical carbon export; sea ice; phytoplankton; seasonality; Arctic ocean; under-ice bloom

Funding

  1. Ministry of Climate and Environment, Norway
  2. Research Council of Norway [244646]
  3. Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norway
  4. CarbonBridge project - Research Council of Norway [226415]
  5. PACES (Polar Regions and Coasts in a Changing Earth System) program of the Helmholtz Association [AWI_PS92_00]
  6. UiT-The Arctic University of Norway
  7. Tromso Research Foundation through project Arctic SIZE (Arctic Seasonal Ice Zone Ecology) [01vm/h15]

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The study reveals clear seasonal patterns in the development and fate of phytoplankton blooms in the Arctic Ocean's seasonal sea ice zone, with low phytoplankton stocks and carbon fluxes in winter and pre-bloom periods, a short but intense productive season in May and June, and moderate carbon export fluxes in the autumn post-bloom conditions. The taxonomic composition of protist assemblages, large grazers, distance to open water, and Atlantic water advection play crucial roles in determining the fate of the blooms and the magnitude of organic carbon exported out of the surface water column. Intense blooms and high export events were observed in ice-covered waters, challenging previous assumptions about the productivity of the marginal ice zone in the area.
Phytoplankton blooms in the Arctic Ocean's seasonal sea ice zone are expected to start earlier and occur further north with retreating and thinning sea ice cover. The current study is the first compilation of phytoplankton bloom development and fate in the seasonally variable sea ice zone north of Svalbard from winter to late summer, using short-term sediment trap deployments. Clear seasonal patterns were discovered, with low winter and pre-bloom phytoplankton standing stocks and export fluxes, a short and intense productive season in May and June, and low Chl a standing stocks but moderate carbon export fluxes in the autumn post-bloom conditions. We observed intense phytoplankton blooms with Chl a standing stocks of >350 mg m(-2) below consolidated sea ice cover, dominated by the prymnesiophyte Phaeocystis poucheti. The largest vertical organic carbon export fluxes to 100 m, of up to 513 mg C m(-2) day-1, were recorded at stations dominated by diatoms, while those dominated by P. poucheti recorded carbon export fluxes up to 310 mg C m(-2) day(-1). Fecal pellets from krill and copepods contributed a substantial fraction to carbon export in certain areas, especially where blooms of P. pouchetii dominated and Atlantic water advection was prominent. The interplay between the taxonomic composition of protist assemblages, large grazers, distance to open water, and Atlantic water advection was found to be crucial in determining the fate of the blooms and the magnitude of organic carbon exported out of the surface water column. Previously, the marginal ice zone was considered the most productive region in the area, but our study reveals intense blooms and high export events in ice-covered waters. This is the first comprehensive study on carbon export fluxes for under-ice phytoplankton blooms, a phenomenon suggested to have increased in importance under the new Arctic sea ice regime.

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