Seasonal nutrient and plankton dynamics in a physical-biological model of Crater Lake

被引:0
|
作者
Katja Fennel
Robert Collier
Gary Larson
Greg Crawford
Emmanuel Boss
机构
[1] Rutgers University,Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences and Department of Geological Science
[2] Oregon State University,College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences
[3] Forest Science Laboratory Oregon State University,USGS Forest and Rangeland Ecosystems Center
[4] Humboldt State University,Department of Oceanography
[5] University of Maine,School of Marine Sciences
来源
Hydrobiologia | 2007年 / 574卷
关键词
Physical-biological model; Deep chlorophyll maximum; Photoacclimation; Crater Lake;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A coupled 1D physical-biological model of Crater Lake is presented. The model simulates the seasonal evolution of two functional phytoplankton groups, total chlorophyll, and zooplankton in good quantitative agreement with observations from a 10-year monitoring study. During the stratified period in summer and early fall the model displays a marked vertical structure: the phytoplankton biomass of the functional group 1, which represents diatoms and dinoflagellates, has its highest concentration in the upper 40 m; the phytoplankton biomass of group 2, which represents chlorophyta, chrysophyta, cryptomonads and cyanobacteria, has its highest concentrations between 50 and 80 m, and phytoplankton chlorophyll has its maximum at 120 m depth. A similar vertical structure is a reoccurring feature in the available data. In the model the key process allowing a vertical separation between biomass and chlorophyll is photoacclimation. Vertical light attenuation (i.e., water clarity) and the physiological ability of phytoplankton to increase their cellular chlorophyll-to-biomass ratio are ultimately determining the location of the chlorophyll maximum. The location of the particle maxima on the other hand is determined by the balance between growth and losses and occurs where growth and losses equal. The vertical particle flux simulated by our model agrees well with flux measurements from a sediment trap. This motivated us to revisit a previously published study by Dymond et al. (1996). Dymond et al. used a box model to estimate the vertical particle flux and found a discrepancy by a factor 2.5–10 between their model-derived flux and measured fluxes from a sediment trap. Their box model neglected the exchange flux of dissolved and suspended organic matter, which, as our model and available data suggests is significant for the vertical exchange of nitrogen. Adjustment of Dymond et al.’s assumptions to account for dissolved and suspended nitrogen yields a flux estimate that is consistent with sediment trap measurements and our model.
引用
收藏
页码:265 / 280
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Seasonal nutrient and plankton dynamics in a physical-biological model of Crater Lake
    Fennel, Katja
    Collier, Robert
    Larson, Gary
    Crawford, Greg
    Boss, Emmanuel
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2007, 574 (1) : 265 - 280
  • [2] Annual plankton dynamics in a coupled physical-biological model of the Strait of Georgia, British Columbia
    Pena, M. Angelica
    Masson, Diane
    Callendar, Wendy
    PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2016, 146 : 58 - 74
  • [3] Plants in motion: Physical-biological interaction in the plankton
    Reynolds, CS
    PHYSICAL PROCESSES IN LAKES IN OCEANS, 1998, 54 : 535 - 560
  • [4] PHYSICAL-BIOLOGICAL INTERACTIONS INFLUENCING MARINE PLANKTON PRODUCTION
    DALY, KL
    SMITH, WO
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY AND SYSTEMATICS, 1993, 24 : 555 - 585
  • [5] A physical-biological coupled model for algal dynamics in lakes
    Franke, U
    Hutter, K
    Jöhnk, K
    BULLETIN OF MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY, 1999, 61 (02) : 239 - 272
  • [6] A physical-biological coupled model for algal dynamics in lakes
    Ulrich Franke
    Kolumban Hutter
    Klaus Jöhnk
    Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, 1999, 61 : 239 - 272
  • [8] Seasonal dynamics of PCBs in the plankton of Lake Erie
    Epplett, TD
    Gewurtz, S
    Lazar, R
    Haffner, GD
    JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH, 2000, 26 (01) : 65 - 73
  • [9] Simulating the 1998 spring bloom in Lake Michigan using a coupled physical-biological model
    Luo, Lin
    Wang, Jia
    Schwab, David J.
    Vanderploeg, Henry
    Leshkevich, George
    Bai, Xuezhi
    Hu, Haoguo
    Wang, Dongxiao
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS, 2012, 117
  • [10] Simulation of annual plankton productivity cycle in the Black Sea by a one-dimensional physical-biological model
    Oguz, T
    Ducklow, H
    MalanotteRizzoli, P
    Tugrul, S
    Nezlin, NP
    Unluata, U
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS, 1996, 101 (C7) : 16585 - 16599