Logo image
Characterization of common phytoplankton on the Louisiana shelf
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Characterization of common phytoplankton on the Louisiana shelf

Michael L Parsons, Ashley L Brandt, R. Eugene Turner, Wendy L Morrison and Nancy N Ralabais
Marine pollution bulletin, Vol.168, pp.112458-112458
07-2021
PMID: 33993041

Abstract

Eutrophication Macondo oil spill Mississippi River Primary production
Phytoplankton and accompanying environmental data (temperature, salinity, secchi depth, stratification, and inorganic nutrients) were analyzed from 672 surface water samples (0 to 1.5 m depth) collected from 95 stations located on the Louisiana shelf between April 1990 and August 2011. Phytoplankton were identified to the lowest practical taxonomic unit from glutaraldehyde-preserved samples using epifluorescent microscopy and reported as cells L−1. Twenty-six phytoplankton taxa (primarily diatoms) that were > 8 μm in size, identified to genus-level resolution and ranked in the top 20 in at least one of three separate categories (average abundance; frequency of occurrence; and bloom frequency) were used in subsequent analyses. Temperature, stratification, and secchi depth constituted the environmental variable combination best related to the phytoplankton community composition patterns across the 672 samples (r = 0.288; p < 0.01) according to BEST analysis (PRIMER 7). The environmental optima of the 26 taxa were calculated using the weighted-averaging algorithm in the C2 program and then used to group the taxa into common phytoplankton clusters (i.e., niches) using PRIMER 7 CLUSTER. The phytoplankton clustered into three groups: Group A (summer assemblage), Group B (winter assemblage), and Group C (spring bloom assemblage). The results demonstrate that the composition of the phytoplankton community is most related to seasonality and physical variables, whereas nutrients appear to play a larger role in driving overall phytoplankton biomass. This study provides a platform to examine phytoplankton responses to future environmental perturbations in the region. •Temperature, stratification, and secchi depth variations are most related to phytoplankton composition variability.•Dissolved nutrient concentrations appear to drive overall phytoplankton biomass.•Phytoplankton on the Louisiana shelf can be distinguished into spring bloom, summer and winter assemblages.•This study provides a platform to examine phytoplankton responses to future environmental perturbations.
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112458View
Published (Version of record) Open

Related links

Metrics

9 Record Views
12 Times Cited - Scopus

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#13 Climate Action
#14 Life Below Water
Logo image