PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Summer diatom blooms in the North Pacific subtropical gyre: 2008-2009.

  • Tracy A Villareal,
  • Colbi G Brown,
  • Mark A Brzezinski,
  • Jeffrey W Krause,
  • Cara Wilson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. e33109

Abstract

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The summertime North Pacific subtropical gyre has widespread phytoplankton blooms between Hawaii and the subtropical front (∼30°N) that appear as chlorophyll (chl) increases in satellite ocean color data. Nitrogen-fixing diatom symbioses (diatom-diazotroph associations: DDAs) often increase 10(2)-10(3) fold in these blooms and contribute to elevated export flux. In 2008 and 2009, two cruises targeted satellite chlorophyll blooms to examine DDA species abundance, chlorophyll concentration, biogenic silica concentration, and hydrography. Generalized observations that DDA blooms occur when the mixed layer depth is 10 µm chl a fraction (∼40-90+% of total chl a). Integrated diatom abundance varied 10-fold over 10 µm size fraction, and increased up to 5-fold in the blooms. The two years differed in the magnitude of the surface chl a increase (2009>2008), the abundance of pennate diatoms within the bloom (2009>2008), and the substantially greater mixed layer depth in 2009. Only the 2009 bloom had sufficient chl a in the >10 µm fraction to produce the observed ocean color chl increase. Blooms had high spatial variability; ocean color images likely average over numerous small events over time and space scales that exceed the individual event scale. Summertime DDA export flux noted at the Hawaii time-series Sta. ALOHA is probably a generalized feature of the eastern N. Pacific north to the subtropical front.