Open-ocean convection process: A driver of the winter nutrient supply and the spring phytoplankton distribution in the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea

Type Article
Date 2017-06
Language English
Author(s) Severin Tatiana1, 2, Kessouri Faycal3, 4, Rembauville Mathieu1, Sanchez-Perez Elvia Denisse1, Oriol Louise1, Caparros Jocelyne1, Pujo-Pay MireilleORCID1, Ghiglione Jean-Francois1, D'Ortenzio Fabrizio5, Taillandier Vincent5, Mayot NicolasORCID5, de Madron Xavier Durrieu6, Ulses Caroline3, Estournel ClaudeORCID3, Conan Pascal1
Affiliation(s) 1 : UPMC Univ Paris 06, Sorbonne Univ, CNRS, Lab Oceanog Microbienne LOMIC,Observ Oceanol, Banyuls Sur Mer, France.
2 : Univ Texas Austin, Marine Sci Inst, Port Aransas, TX USA.
3 : Univ Toulouse, CNRS, Lab Aerol, Toulouse, France.
4 : Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Atmospher & Ocean Sci, Math Sci, Los Angeles, CA USA.
5 : UPMC Univ Paris 06, Sorbonne Univ, INSU CNRS, LOV, Villefranche Sur Mer, France.
6 : Univ Perpignan, CNRS, CEFREM, Perpignan, France.
Source Journal Of Geophysical Research-oceans (2169-9275) (Amer Geophysical Union), 2017-06 , Vol. 122 , N. 6 , P. 4587-4601
DOI 10.1002/2016JC012664
WOS© Times Cited 16
Note This article also appears in: Dense water formations in the North Western Mediterranean: from the physical forcings to the biogeochemical consequences
Abstract

This study was a part of the DeWEX project (Deep Water formation Experiment), designed to better understand the impact of dense water formation on the marine biogeochemical cycles. Here, nutrient and phytoplankton vertical and horizontal distributions were investigated during a deep open-ocean convection event and during the following spring bloom in the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea (NWM). In February 2013, the deep convection event established a surface nutrient gradient from the center of the deep convection patch to the surrounding mixed and stratified areas. In the center of the convection area, a slight but significant difference of nitrate, phosphate and silicate concentrations was observed possibly due to the different volume of deep waters included in the mixing or to the sediment resuspension occurring where the mixing reached the bottom. One of this process, or a combination of both, enriched the water column in silicate and phosphate, and altered significantly the stoichiometry in the center of the deep convection area. This alteration favored the local development of microphytoplankton in spring, while nanophytoplankton dominated neighboring locations where the convection reached the deep layer but not the bottom. This study shows that the convection process influences both winter nutrients distribution and spring phytoplankton distribution and community structure. Modifications of the convection's spatial scale and intensity (i.e., convective mixing depth) are likely to have strong consequences on phytoplankton community structure and distribution in the NWM, and thus on the marine food web. Plain Language Summary The deep open-ocean convection in the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea is an important process for the formation and the circulation of the deep waters of the entire Mediterranean Sea, but also for the local spring phytoplankton bloom. In this study, we showed that variations of the convective mixing depth induced different supply in nitrate, phosphate and silicate, and thus different nutrients ratios in the surface waters. These variations could be the result of pore water release loaded in nutrients because of the sediment resuspension enhanced by the bottom-reached mixing. Because of this phenomenon, the slightly higher silicate concentrations in the center of the convection area favored diatoms development in spring. Modifications of this process because of the climate change could then have some consequences on the phytoplankton community structure and thus on the entire marine food web.

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Severin Tatiana, Kessouri Faycal, Rembauville Mathieu, Sanchez-Perez Elvia Denisse, Oriol Louise, Caparros Jocelyne, Pujo-Pay Mireille, Ghiglione Jean-Francois, D'Ortenzio Fabrizio, Taillandier Vincent, Mayot Nicolas, de Madron Xavier Durrieu, Ulses Caroline, Estournel Claude, Conan Pascal (2017). Open-ocean convection process: A driver of the winter nutrient supply and the spring phytoplankton distribution in the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea. Journal Of Geophysical Research-oceans, 122(6), 4587-4601. Publisher's official version : https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JC012664 , Open Access version : https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00466/57754/