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Mixing and biological production at eddy margins in the eastern Gulf of Alaska
Authors:T.D. Peterson  D.W. CrawfordP.J. Harrison
Affiliation:a Division of Environmental & Biomolecular Systems, Oregon Health & Science University, 20,000 NW Walker Rd., Beaverton, OR 97006, USA
b Science and Technology Center for Coastal Margin Observation and Prediction, Oregon Health & Science University, 20,000 NW Walker Rd., Beaverton, OR 97006, USA
c Department of Biology, PO Box 3020, Station CSC, University of Victoria, Victoria, B.C., Canada V8W 3N5
d Department of Earth & Ocean Sciences, University of British Columbia, 2146 Health Sciences Mall, Vancouver, B.C., Canada V6T 1Z3
Abstract:We performed a multi-day shipboard experiment in June 2001 to test whether combining water from within an anticyclonic mesoscale eddy in the eastern Gulf of Alaska with water from outside could result in enhanced phytoplankton growth and to determine how mixing might influence planktonic assemblages. Initially, the eddy had lower standing stocks of algal pigments (chlorophyll a [chl a] and accessory pigments), nutrients, phytoplankton, and particulate organic carbon/nitrogen compared to waters outside of the eddy. The eddy possessed a greater diversity and abundance of coastal diatoms while the outside waters had a greater proportion of oceanic species, including the endemic pennate diatom, Nitzschia cylindroformis. After one week of incubation, rates of primary production were significantly higher in the mixed water compared to both the eddy and outside treatments. Pigment concentrations (except chl c3, alloxanthin, and zeaxanthin) and the proportion of large diatoms (mainly Pseudo-nitzschia spp.) and heterotrophic dinoflagellates were greater in the mixed water than would be expected from the simple combination of inside and outside waters. Nutrient limitation (most likely by trace metals) appeared to be less severe in the mixed water. Chl a was enhanced in the mixed water, particularly when compared to the eddy water. The mixing of eddy and outside water masses stimulated primary production by ∼20%, but more importantly, the mixing resulted in a distinct planktonic assemblage. The biomass enrichment was short-lived, indicating that the maintenance of elevated chl a would require further mixing events in a physical setting that also permits an accumulation of biomass. We note that submesoscale processes, including the intensification of ageostrophic circulation that elicits strong vertical mixing in the presence of strain, might explain observed patterns of high phytoplankton standing stocks at the inner edges of Haida eddies in the field.
Keywords:Mesoscale eddy   Phytoplankton assemblage   Pigments   Gulf of Alaska   Northeast Pacific
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