First description of in situ chlorophyll fluorescence signal within East Antarctic coastal polynyas during fall and winter
Antarctic coastal polynyas are persistent and recurrent regions of open water located between the coast and the drifting pack-ice. In spring, they are the first polar areas to be exposed to light, leading to the development of phytoplankton blooms, making polynyas potential ecological hotspots in se...
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Zusammenfassung: | Antarctic coastal polynyas are persistent and recurrent regions of open
water located between the coast and the drifting pack-ice. In spring, they
are the first polar areas to be exposed to light, leading to the
development of phytoplankton blooms, making polynyas potential ecological
hotspots in sea-ice regions. Knowledge on polynya oceanography and ecology
during winter is limited due to their inaccessibility. This study
describes i) the first in situ chlorophyll fluorescence signal (a proxy
for chlorophyll-a concentration and thus presence of phytoplankton) in
polynyas between the end of summer and winter, ii) assesses whether the
signal persists through time and iii) identifies its main oceanographic
drivers. The dataset comprises 698 profiles of fluorescence, temperature
and salinity recorded by southern elephant seals in 2011, 2019–2021 in the
Cape-Darnley (CDP;67˚S-69˚E) and Shackleton (SP;66˚S-95˚E) polynyas
between February and September. A significant fluorescence signal was
observed until April in both polynyas. An additional signal occurring at
130m depth in August within CDP may result from in situ growth of
phytoplankton due to potential adaptation to low irradiance or remnant
chlorophyll-a that was advected into the polynya. The decrease and
deepening of the fluorescence signal from February to August were
accompanied by the deepening of the mixed layer depth and a cooling and
salinification of the water column in both polynyas. Using Principal
Component Analysis as an exploratory tool, we highlighted previously
unsuspected drivers of the fluorescence signal within polynyas. CDP shows
clear differences in biological and environmental conditions depending on
topographic features with higher fluorescence in warmer and saltier waters
on the shelf compared with the continental slope. In SP, near the
ice-shelf, a significant fluorescence signal in April below the mixed
layer (around 130m depth), was associated with fresher and warmer waters.
We hypothesize that this signal could result from potential ice-shelf
melting from warm water intrusions onto the shelf leading to iron supply
necessary to fuel phytoplankton growth. This study supports that Antarctic
coastal polynyas may have a key role for polar ecosystems as biologically
active areas throughout the season within the sea-ice region despite inter
and intra-polynya differences in environmental conditions. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.wstqjq2rd |