Differential response of equatorial Pacific phytoplankton to iron fertilization

Journal Article
Differential response of equatorial Pacific phytoplankton to iron fertilization
Cavender-Bares, K.K., E.L. Mann, S.W. Chisholm, M.E. Ondrusek and R.R. Bidigare (1999)
Limnology and Oceanography, 44(2): 237-246

Abstract/Summary:

Recent unenclosed iron-fertilization experiments in the equatorial Pacific Ocean have shown that phytoplankton
biomass can be increased substantially by the addition of iron. Analyses of size-fractionated chlorophyll indicate that
much of the increase during the most recent fertilization experiment, IronEx II, occurred in the .10-mm size fraction.
We used flow cytometry, combined with taxon-specific pigment measurements by high-performance liquid chromatography
(HPLC), to analyze the responses of five different groups of phytoplankton: Prochlorococcus, Synechococcus,
ultraplankton, nanoplankton, and pennate diatoms. These results are unique in the suite of measurements from the
IronEx studies in that they simultaneously examine individual cell properties, which are grazer independent, and
population dynamics, which reflect the net result of growth and grazing. Our results show that
the overall increase of chlorophyll a (Chl a) in the patch was due in part to increases in chlorophyll content per cell
and in part to increases in cell numbers of specific groups. Cellular fluorescence was stimulated by iron addition in
all five groups to a qualitatively similar degree and was correlated with taxon-specific changes in cellular pigments.
In terms of net cell growth, however, these groups responded very differently. The groups that dominated the community
before the addition of iron increased at most twofold in cell number; Prochlorococcus actually decreased. In
contrast, the initially rare pennate diatoms increased 15-fold in number by the peak of the iron-induced bloom. Within
1 week, this differential response led to a dramatic change in the phytoplankton community structure, from one
dominated by picoplankton to one dominated by large diatoms. It is not known whether this shift would be sustained
over extended periods of fertilization, a response that would ultimately change the structure of the food web.

© 1999 American Society of Limnology and Oceanography

Citation:

Cavender-Bares, K.K., E.L. Mann, S.W. Chisholm, M.E. Ondrusek and R.R. Bidigare (1999): Differential response of equatorial Pacific phytoplankton to iron fertilization. Limnology and Oceanography, 44(2): 237-246 (http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_44/issue_2/0237.html)
  • Journal Article
Differential response of equatorial Pacific phytoplankton to iron fertilization

Cavender-Bares, K.K., E.L. Mann, S.W. Chisholm, M.E. Ondrusek and R.R. Bidigare

Abstract/Summary: 

Recent unenclosed iron-fertilization experiments in the equatorial Pacific Ocean have shown that phytoplankton
biomass can be increased substantially by the addition of iron. Analyses of size-fractionated chlorophyll indicate that
much of the increase during the most recent fertilization experiment, IronEx II, occurred in the .10-mm size fraction.
We used flow cytometry, combined with taxon-specific pigment measurements by high-performance liquid chromatography
(HPLC), to analyze the responses of five different groups of phytoplankton: Prochlorococcus, Synechococcus,
ultraplankton, nanoplankton, and pennate diatoms. These results are unique in the suite of measurements from the
IronEx studies in that they simultaneously examine individual cell properties, which are grazer independent, and
population dynamics, which reflect the net result of growth and grazing. Our results show that
the overall increase of chlorophyll a (Chl a) in the patch was due in part to increases in chlorophyll content per cell
and in part to increases in cell numbers of specific groups. Cellular fluorescence was stimulated by iron addition in
all five groups to a qualitatively similar degree and was correlated with taxon-specific changes in cellular pigments.
In terms of net cell growth, however, these groups responded very differently. The groups that dominated the community
before the addition of iron increased at most twofold in cell number; Prochlorococcus actually decreased. In
contrast, the initially rare pennate diatoms increased 15-fold in number by the peak of the iron-induced bloom. Within
1 week, this differential response led to a dramatic change in the phytoplankton community structure, from one
dominated by picoplankton to one dominated by large diatoms. It is not known whether this shift would be sustained
over extended periods of fertilization, a response that would ultimately change the structure of the food web.

© 1999 American Society of Limnology and Oceanography