Abstract

The various photosynthetic apparatus and light utilization strategies of phytoplankton are among the critical factors that regulate the distribution of phytoplankton and primary productivity in the ocean. Active chlorophyll fluorescence has been a powerful technique for assessing the nutritional status of phytoplankton by studying the dynamics of photosynthesis. Further studies of the energetic stoichiometry between light absorption and carbon fixation have enhanced understanding of the ways phytoplankton adapt to their niches. To explore the ecophysiology of a Prochlorococcus-dominated phytoplankton assemblage, we conducted studies of the diel patterns of variable fluorescence and carbon fixation by phytoplankton in the oligotrophic South China Sea (SCS) basin in June 2017. We found that phytoplankton photosynthetic performance at stations SEATS and SS1 were characterized by a nocturnal decrease, dawn maximum, and midday decrease of the maximum quantum yield of PSII (/, which has been denoted as both Fv/Fm and /) in the nutrient-depleted surface layer. That these diel patterns of / were similar to those in the tropical Pacific Ocean suggests macro-nutrient and potentially micro-nutrient stress. However, the fact that variations were larger in the central basin than at the basin's edge implied variability in the degree of nutrient limitation in the basin. The estimated molar ratio of gross O2 production to net production of carbon (GOP:NPC) of 4.9:1 was similar to ratios reported across the world's oceans. The narrow range of the GOP:NPC ratios is consistent with the assumption that there is a common strategy for photosynthetic energy allocation by phytoplankton. That photo-inactivated photosystems or nonphotochemical quenching rather than GOP accounted for most of the radiation absorbed by phytoplankton explains why the maximum quantum yield of carbon fixation was rather low in the oligotrophic SCS.

Highlights

  • Phytoplankton are the foundation of marine pelagic ecosystems because they are by far the major primary producers in the ocean (Falkowski et al, 1998)

  • We found that phytoplankton photosynthetic performance at stations SEATS and SS1 were characterized by a nocturnal decrease, dawn maximum, and midday decrease of the maximum quantum yield of PSII (Fv(â€Č)/Fm(â€Č), which has been denoted as both Fv/Fm and Fâ€Čv/Fâ€Čm) in the nutrient-depleted surface layer

  • The diel pattern of phytoplankton photosynthesis in the picocyanobacteria Prochlorococcus–dominated South China Sea (SCS) basin is typical of the pattern observed in the open ocean; it is characterized by a nocturnal decrease of Fv(â€Č)/Fm(â€Č) and midday depression of photosynthetic parameters in the nutrient-depleted surface layer

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Summary

Introduction

Phytoplankton are the foundation of marine pelagic ecosystems because they are by far the major primary producers in the ocean (Falkowski et al, 1998). Behrenfeld and Kolber (1999) have demonstrated that autonomous active chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements along a cruise track can record diel changes of Fv/Fm that can be used to assess the nutritional state of a phytoplankton assemblage (Behrenfeld and Milligan, 2013). Analysis of such data has provided a synoptic picture of eco-physiological regimes in the tropical Pacific Ocean (Behrenfeld et al, 2006). Through careful analysis of the dynamics of active chlorophyll a fluorescence and carbon fixation of phytoplankton, it is possible to determine the photosynthetic efficiency between light absorption and carbon fixation and to relate that efficiency to the light utilization strategy of the phytoplankton

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