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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2014-10-07
    Description: Time series length-frequency data are presented for Themisto amphipods collected as swimmers by moored sediment traps since 2000 at the AWI deep-sea observatory HAUSGARTEN (79°N/4°E) in the eastern Fram Strait. Amphipod occurrences increased significantly from 2000 to 2009 at 200-300 m depth, and the North Atlantic species Themisto compressa was continuously present in the samples starting in 2004. We present year-round records of large adult Themisto amphipods, including the appearance of T. libellula with a total body length of up to 56.7 mm and juveniles starting from 4.0 mm. The length of T. abyssorum ranged from 4.2-25.6 mm, whereas it varied for T. compressa from 8.8-24.4 mm. Length-frequency analysis indicated a life span of 2 years for T. abyssorum and at least 3 years for T. libellula. The absence of juveniles for T. compressa suggested its reproduction in southern subarctic areas and its occasional northward migration with warmer Atlantic water into the eastern Fram Strait. The seasonal and long-term size structure of the three pelagic species was consistent over the course of the study, indicating no changes occurred in cohort development due to increasing abundances or warming water temperatures.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2014-12-08
    Description: The remote waters of the Pacific region of the Southern Ocean are the furthest away from any upstream and upwind continental Fe sources. This prime area for expecting Fe limitation of the plankton ecosystem was studied (March–April 1995) along a north–south transect at ∼89°W. At the end of the austral summer the upper wind-mixed layers were in the order of ∼100 m deep, thus mixing the algae down into the dimly lit part of the euphotic zone where photosynthesis is severely restricted. The dissolved Fe was found at low concentrations ranging from 0.05 nM near the surface to 0.5 nM in deeper waters. Along the transect (52°S–69°S), the dissolved iron was enhanced in the Polar Front, as well as near the Antarctic continental margin (0.6–1.0 nM). In between, the southern ACC branch was depleted with iron; here the concentrations in surface waters were quite uniform at about 0.21 nM. This is only somewhat lower than the 0.49 nM (October 1992) and 0.31 nM (November 1992) averages in early spring in the southern ACC part of Atlantic 6°W sections [de Baar, H.J.W., de Jong, J.T.M., Bakker, D.C.E.. Löscher, B.M., Veth, C., Bathmann, U., Smetacek, V., 1995. Importance of iron for phytoplankton spring blooms and CO2 drawdown in the Southern Ocean. Nature 373, 412–415; Löscher, B.M., de Jong, J.T.M., de Baar, H.J.W., Veth, C., Dehairs, F., 1997. The distribution of iron in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Deep-Sea Research II 44, 143–188.]. First, the lower ∼0.21 nM in March–April 1995 may partly be due to continuation of the seasonal trend where the phytoplankton growth, albeit modest, was removing Fe from the surface waters. Secondly, the 89°W Pacific stations are further downstream continental or seafloor sources than the Atlantic 6°W section. In the latter case, the ACC water had passed through the Drake Passage and also over the Sandwich Plateau. Indeed for Drake Passage, intermediate Fe concentrations have been reported by others. The generally somewhat lower surface water Fe at the ACC and PF at 89°W is consistent with the distance from sources and the late summer. It also would explain the very low abundance of phytoplankton (Chl a) in the region and the conspicuous absence of plankton blooms. In the subAntarctic waters north of the Polar Front there are no diatoms, let alone diatom blooms, due to low availability of silicate. Thus, it appears the biological productivity is suppressed due to iron deficiency, in combination with the severe seasonal effects of wind mixing on the light climate, as well as regional silicate limitation for diatoms.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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