Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

 

 

 

 

 

 
     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Log in


Forgot your password?
You are here: Home / PDFs on demand / Bibliographical References of PDFs on demand / Resurrecting the Ecological Underpinnings of Ocean Plankton Blooms

Michael Behrenfeld and Emmanuel Boss (2014)

Resurrecting the Ecological Underpinnings of Ocean Plankton Blooms

In: Annual Review of Marine Science, Vol 6, ed. by Carlson, C. A. and Giovannoni, S. J., vol. 6, pp. 167-194, Annual Reviews, Palo Alto. (ISBN: 978-0-8243-4506-8).

Nutrient and light conditions control phytoplankton division rates in the surface ocean and, it is commonly believed, dictate when and where high concentrations, or blooms, of plankton occur. Yet after a century of investigation, rates of phytoplankton biomass accumulation show no correlation with cell division rates. Consequently, factors controlling plankton blooms remain highly controversial. In this review, we endorse the view that blooms are not governed by abiotic factors controlling cell division, but rather reflect subtle ecosystem imbalances instigated by climate forcings or food-web shifts. The annual global procession of ocean plankton blooms thus represents a report on the recent history of predator-prey interactions modulated by physical processes that, almost coincidentally, also control surface nutrient inputs.

climate, growth-rates, zooplankton, critical depth hypothesis, phytoplankton, primary productivity, central equatorial pacific, iron-fertilization experiment, seasonal succession, subpolar north-atlantic, spring phytoplankton blooms, microbial communities, succession, predator-prey, marine primary production
WOS:000329657800009
Find PDF
 

 

 

RBINS private PDFs
e-ressources