4.7 Article

Effects of a Submesoscale Oceanographic Filament on Zooplankton Dynamics in the Arctic Marginal Ice Zone

期刊

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
卷 8, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.625395

关键词

Plankton patchiness; climate change; biodiversity; Calanus; convergence; biomass; accumulation; Atlantification

资金

  1. Russian-German Research Cooperation QUARCCS - German Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF) [03F0777A]
  2. [AWI_PS107_10]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Submesoscale structures have a significant impact on zooplankton dynamics and ecosystems, structuring distinct zooplankton communities in both vertical and horizontal dimensions, accumulating abundance and biomass of epipelagic species. High-velocity jets associated with these features play a crucial role in species allocation and biological connectivity, potentially accelerating processes such as the 'Atlantification' of the Arctic.
Submesoscale structures, characterized by intense vertical and horizontal velocities, potentially play a crucial role in oceanographic dynamics and pelagic fluxes. Due to their small spatial scale and short temporal persistence, conditions for in situ measurements are challenging and thus the role of such structures for zooplankton distribution is still unclear. During RV Polarstern expedition PS107 to Arctic Fram Strait in July/August 2017, a submesoscale filament was detected, which initiated an ad hoc oceanographic and biological sampling campaign. To determine zooplankton taxonomic composition, horizontal and vertical distribution, abundance and biomass, vertical MultiNet hauls (depth intervals: 300-200-100-50-10-0 m) were taken at four stations across the filament. Zooplankton data were evaluated in context with the physical-oceanographic observations of the filament to assess submesoscale physical-biological interactions. Our data show that submesoscale features considerably impact zooplankton dynamics. While structuring the pelagial with distinct zooplankton communities in a vertical as well as horizontal dimension, they accumulate abundance and biomass of epipelagic species at the site of convergence. Further, high-velocity jets associated with such dynamics are possibly of major importance for species allocation and biological connectivity, accelerating for instance processes such as the 'Atlantification' of the Arctic. Thus, submesoscale features affect the surrounding ecosystem in multiple ways with consequences for higher trophic levels and biogeochemical cycles.

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