Coccolithophore export production and seasonal variation from a trans-Atlantic array of sediment trap moorings (NW Africa to Caribbean)

Catarina Vicente Guerreiro1, Karl-Heinz Baumann1,2, Geert-Jan A. Brummer3, Gerhard Fischer1,2, Laura Korte3 and Jan-Berend Willem Stuut2,4, (1)University of Bremen, Dep. Geosciences, Bremen, Germany, (2)MARUM - University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany, (3)Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Den Burg, Netherlands, (4)Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University, Ocean Sciences, Den Burg, Netherlands
Abstract:
In this study, we contribute to disclose the ecology and seasonal variability of coccolithophores, to improve their use as proxies for environmental variability in the Equatorial Atlantic Ocean. To this aim, the coccolithophore export fluxes and species composition were investigated from a trans-Atlantic array of sediment trap moorings from NW Africa (Cape Blanc) into the Caribbean (Barbados) (i.e., CB at 20°N/52ºW: M1 at 12ºN/23ºW; M2 at 14ºN/37ºW; M4 at 12ºN/49ºW). Each of the sediment trap devices was deployed at 1200 m depth, sampling settling particles at two-week intervals, and covering a full year (Oct. 2012 to Oct. 2013).

First results show important contrasts between both ends of the trans-Atlantic array: total coccolith fluxes were much higher in the oligotrophic station M4 (western part of the basin) than in the highly productive waters off Cape Blanc (eastern edge of the basin), mostly due to the overwhelming dominance of the deep photic layer species Florisphaera profunda and Gladiolithus flabellatus. Off Cape Blanc, higher abundances of the placolith-bearing species Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa spp. were found, more typical of the upper photic layer, while F. profunda decreases in relative abundance and G. flabellatus is almost absent, in comparison to M4. The presence of trans-Atlantic ecological gradients in terms of species diversity and prevalence of K- and r-selected species will be discussed with respect to the prevailing environmental conditions during the monitored period, including Saharan-dust deposition and the influence of the Amazon River plume.

This study is part of ongoing multidisciplinary research in the study area, in the context of the projects “DUSTRAFFIC” and “TRAFFIC - Transatlantic Fluxes of Saharan Dust”.