Contrasting effect of Saharan dust and UVR on autotrophic picoplankton in nearshore versus offshore waters of Mediterranean Sea
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
González-Olalla, Juan Manuel; Medina-Sánchez, Juan Manuel; Cabrerizo, Marco J.; Villar-Argáiz, Manuel; Sánchez-Castillo, Pedro M.; Carrillo, PresentaciónEditorial
American Geophysical Union Publications
Materia
Phytoplankton Mediterranean Sea Ultraviolet radiation Saharan dust
Fecha
2017-08-19Referencia bibliográfica
González-Olalla, J. M., J. M. Medina- Sánchez, M. J. Cabrerizo, M. Villar-Argáiz, P. M. Sánchez-Castillo, and P. Carrillo (2017), Contrasting effect of Saharan dust and UVR on autotrophic picoplankton in nearshore versus offshore waters of Mediterranean Sea, J. Geophys. Res. Biogeosci., 122, 2085–2103, doi:10.1002/2017JG003834.
Resumen
Autotrophic picoplankton (APP) is responsible for the vast majority of primary production in
oligotrophic marine areas, such as the Alboran Sea. The increase in atmospheric dust deposition (e.g., from
Sahara Desert) associated with global warming, together with the high UV radiation (UVR) on these
ecosystems, may generate effects on APP hitherto unknown. We performed an observational study across
the Alboran Sea to establish which factors control the abundance and distribution of APP, and we made a
microcosm experiment in two distinct areas, nearshore and offshore, to predict the joint UVR × dust impact
on APP at midterm scales. Our observational study showed that temperature (T) was the main factor
explaining the APP distribution whereas total dissolved nitrogen positively correlated with APP abundance.
Our experimental study revealed that Saharan dust inputs reduced or inverted the UVR damage on the
photosynthetic quantum yield (ΦPSII) and picoplanktonic primary production (PPP) in the nearshore area but
accentuated it in the offshore. This contrasting effect is partially explained by the nonphotochemical
quenching, acting as a photorepair mechanism. Picoeukaryotes reflected the observed effects on the
physiological and metabolic variables, and Synechococcus was the only picoprokaryotic group that showed a
positive response under UVR × dust conditions. Our study highlights a dual sensitivity of nearshore versus
offshore picoplankton to dust inputs and UVR fluxes, just at the time in which these two global-change
factors show their highest intensities and may recreate a potential future response of the microbial food web
under global-change conditions.





