B34A:
From Plankton Food Webs to Global Biogeochemical Cycles: Using Mechanistic Understanding to Scale Up Microbial and Planktonic Processes II Posters
B34A:
From Plankton Food Webs to Global Biogeochemical Cycles: Using Mechanistic Understanding to Scale Up Microbial and Planktonic Processes II Posters
From Plankton Food Webs to Global Biogeochemical Cycles: Using Mechanistic Understanding to Scale Up Microbial and Planktonic Processes II Posters
Session ID#: 9650
Session Description:
Food-web structure largely shapes biogeochemical cycles, including marine microbes that determine key biochemical transformations and larger plankton that mediate material processes such as particle packaging and transport. However, the mechanisms that link microbial and planktonic trophic processes to gravitational flux and elemental cycling remain poorly characterized. The interaction of simultaneous processes such as phytoplankton production and physiology, zooplankton trophic dynamics, microbial remineralization, physical advection and mixing, obscure prediction of key biogeochemical processes including the biological carbon pump. A mechanistic understanding is difficulted by the lack of simultaneous measurements of carbon cycling and plankton processes. Prediction of global biogeochemical cycling is further complicated by the range of scales across which these processes operate and are understood. Estimation of elemental cycles requires an appreciation of the scaling rules connecting cellular metabolism to global inventories and fluxes. However, the empirically derived or assumed scaling rules to make these conversions are rarely discussed or tested, despite the frequent mismatch between measurements and models made over different time and space scales. We invite contributions that investigate mechanisms linking plankton trophic processes to biogeochemical cycling and carbon export, and studies that compare and contrast measurements of plankton metabolism with resultant models of biogeochemical fluxes.
Primary Chair: Moira Decima, NIWA National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington, New Zealand
Chairs: Michael R Stukel, Florida State University, Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science, Tallahassee, FL, United States, Carol Robinson, The University of East Anglia, Centre for Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences (COAS), School of Environmental Sciences, Norwich, United Kingdom and Pablo Serret, University of Vigo, Departamento de Ecología y Biología animal, Vigo, Spain
Moderators: Moira Decima, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, CA, United States, Michael R Stukel, Horn Point Laboratory, Cambridge, MD, United States, Pablo Serret, University of Vigo, Departamento de Ecología y Biología animal, Vigo, Spain and Carol Robinson, The University of East Anglia, Centre for Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences (COAS), School of Environmental Sciences, Norwich, United Kingdom
Student Paper Review Liaisons: Carol Robinson, The University of East Anglia, Centre for Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences (COAS), School of Environmental Sciences, Norwich, United Kingdom and Pablo Serret, University of Vigo, Departamento de Ecología y Biología animal, Vigo, Spain
Index Terms:
1615 Biogeochemical cycles, processes, and modeling [GLOBAL CHANGE]
4806 Carbon cycling [OCEANOGRAPHY: BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL]
4817 Food webs, structure, and dynamics [OCEANOGRAPHY: BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL]
4890 Zooplankton [OCEANOGRAPHY: BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL]
Co-Sponsor(s):
- ME - Marine Ecosystems
- PP - Phytoplankton and Primary Production
Abstracts Submitted to this Session:
Seasonal changes in zooplankton swimmer community collected by sediment trap moored in the western North Pacific Ocean (87627)
Effects of Phytoplankton Growth Phase on the Formation and Properties of Marine Snow (87666)
Effects of Phytoplankton Growth Phase on Delayed Settling Behavior of Marine Snow Aggregates at Sharp Density Transitions (87772)
Characterizing seasonal contribution of particles from the surface ocean to the mesopelagic food web through amino acid compound specific isotopic analysis and 234Thorium measurements (87936)
How do changes in plankton community structure influence the biological pump? A mesocosm study (89371)
Comparison of Productivity, Plankton Types and Carbon Export Mechanisms in two Different Regimes of Subtropical North Atlantic: a Modeling Study (91149)
The importance of diel vertical migrations of mesozooplankton for supporting a mesopelagic ecosystem: an Inverse Modeling Approach in the California Current (91185)
The biological pump and lower trophic level controls on carbon cycling in Lake Superior: Insights from a multi-pronged study (91637)
Investigating the Trophic Ecology of the Fish Genus Cyclothone in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre Using Stable Isotope Techniques (93314)
Respiration, and growth-efficiency of coastal prokaryote communities in continuous cultures under different growth rates and temperatures. (88890)
Effect of deep water nutrient enrichment on plankton metabolism in the N and S Atlantic gyres (91668)
Respiration and carbon dynamics of free-living and particle-attached bacteria in coastal waters of NE Pacific (92109)
The effects of light, primary production, and temperature on bacterial production at Station ALOHA (93213)
GEL-LIKE PARTICLES DOMINATE PARTICULATE ORGANIC CARBON IN THE OCEAN’S INTERIOR — EVIDENCE FROM SUBTROPICAL AND EQUATORIAL REGIONS OF THE CENTRAL PACIFIC (93249)
See more of: Biogeochemistry and Nutrients