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Abstract(s)
Phytoplankton productivity is usually determined from water samples incubated at a number of irradiance levels during
several hours. The resultant productivity-irradiance (P–E) curves are then used to estimate local and/or global phytoplankton
production. However, there is growing evidence that these curves, referred as static, underestimate phytoplankton photosynthesis
to a great deal, by assuming a stable response to light over the incubation period. One of the drawbacks of static P–E curves is
the overestimation of photoinhibition.
In this work, three one-dimensional vertically resolved models were developed as simply as possible, to investigate differences
between static and dynamic phytoplankton productivity in three marine ecosystems: a turbid estuary, a coastal area and an
open ocean ecosystem. The results show that, when photoinhibition development time is considered (dynamic model), the
primary production estimates are always higher than when calculated with the static model. The quantitative importance of these
differences varies with the type of ecosystem and it appears to be more important in coastal areas and estuaries (from 21 to 72%)
than in oceanic waters (10%). Thus, these results suggest that primary production estimates, obtained under the assumption of a
static behaviour response to light, may underestimate the real values of global phytoplankton primary production. Calculations
suggest that the quantitative importance of this underestimation may be larger than the global missing carbon sink.
Description
Keywords
Phytoplankton production P–E relationship Static and dynamic modelling Photoinhibition parameter
Citation
Ecological Modelling. 190 (2006), 299-316.